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Peace is more difficult than war.
Aristotle
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Aristotle
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More quotes by Aristotle
Man by Nature desires to know.
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Bashfulness is an ornament to youth, but a reproach to old age.
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He who is by nature not his own but another's man is by nature a slave.
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I will not allow the Athenians to sin twice against philosophy.
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Philosophy can make people sick.
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Thus every action must be due to one or other of seven causes: chance, nature, compulsion, habit, reasoning, anger, or appetite.
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...one Greek city state had a fundamental law: anyone proposing revisions to the constitution did so with a noose around his neck. If his proposal lost he was instantly hanged.
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In a polity, each citizen is to possess his own arms, which are not supplied or owned by the state.
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Every wicked man is in ignorance as to what he ought to do, and from what to abstain, and it is because of error such as this that men become unjust and, in a word, wicked.
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The body is most fully developed from thirty to thirty-five years of age, the mind at about forty-nine.
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In practical matters the end is not mere speculative knowledge of what is to be done, but rather the doing of it. It is not enough to know about Virtue, then, but we must endeavor to possess it, and to use it, or to take any other steps that may make.
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Great is the good fortune of a state in which the citizens have a moderate and sufficient property.
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He who can be, and therefore is, another's, and he who participates in reason enough to apprehend, but not to have, is a slave by nature.
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For well-being and health, again, the homestead should be airy in summer, and sunny in winter. A homestead possessing these qualities would be longer than it is deep and its main front would face the south.
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For as the interposition of a rivulet, however small, will occasion the line of the phalanx to fluctuate, so any trifling disagreement will be the cause of seditions but they will not so soon flow from anything else as from the disagreement between virtue and vice, and next to that between poverty and riches.
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There is always something new coming out of Africa.
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The greatest crimes are caused by surfeit, not by want.
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Moral virtue is ... a mean between two vices, that of excess and that of defect, and ... it is no small task to hit the mean in each case, as it is not, for example, any chance comer, but only the geometer, who can find the center of a given circle.
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That body is heavier than another which, in an equal bulk, moves downward quicker.
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He is his own best friend and takes delight in privacy whereas the man of no virtue or ability is his own worst enemy and is afraid of solitude.
Aristotle