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Speeches are like babies-easy to conceive but hard to deliver.
Aristotle
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Aristotle
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More quotes by Aristotle
The beauty of the soul shines out when a man bears with composure one heavy mischance after another, not because he does not feel them, but because he is a man of high and heroic temper.
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When couples have children in excess, let abortion be procured before sense and life have begun what may or may not be lawfully done in these cases depends on the question of life and sensation.
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First, have a definite, clear practical ideal a goal, an objective. Second, have the necessary means to achieve your ends wisdom, money, materials, and methods. Third, adjust all your means to that end.
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Aristocracy is that form of government in which education and discipline are qualifications for suffrage and office holding.
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The man who is content to live alone is either a beast or a god.
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...for all men do their acts with a view to achieving something which is, in their view, a good.
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Cruel is the strife of brothers.
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The chief forms of beauty are order and symmetry and definiteness, which the mathematical sciences demonstrate in a special degree.
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Not to get what you have set your heart on is almost as bad as getting nothing at all.
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Music has a power of forming the character, and should therefore be introduced into the education of the young.
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The proof that you know something is that you are able to teach it
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There is simple ignorance, which is the source of lighter offenses, and double ignorance, which is accompanied by a conceit of wisdom.
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Neither old people nor sour people seem to make friends easily for there is little that is pleasant in them.
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All human happiness and misery take the form of action.
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Friends are much better tried in bad fortune than in good.
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To give a satisfactory decision as to the truth it is necessary to be rather an arbitrator than a party to the dispute.
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Purpose is a desire for something in our own power, coupled with an investigation into its means.
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Those whose days are consumed in the low pursuits of avarice, or the gaudy frivolties of fashion, unobservant of nature's lovelinessof demarcation, nor on which side thereof an intermediate form should lie.
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He is courageous who endures and fears the right thing, for the right motive, in the right way and at the right times.
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The life of theoretical philosophy is the best and happiest a man can lead. Few men are capable of it and then only intermittently. For the rest there is a second-best way of life, that of moral virtue and practical wisdom.
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