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Nothing is what rocks dream about
Aristotle
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More quotes by Aristotle
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.
Aristotle
Not to get what you have set your heart on is almost as bad as getting nothing at all.
Aristotle
In the first place, then, men should guard against the beginning of change, and in the second place they should not rely upon the political devices of which I have already spoken invented only to deceive the people, for they are proved by experience to be useless.
Aristotle
Justice is the loveliest and health is the best. but the sweetest to obtain is the heart's desire.
Aristotle
A common danger unites even the bitterest enemies.
Aristotle
The body is most fully developed from thirty to thirty-five years of age, the mind at about forty-nine.
Aristotle
We are what we do. Excellence, therefore, is not an act, but a habit.
Aristotle
A likely impossibility is always preferable to an unconvincing possibility.
Aristotle
Happiness is a thing honored and perfect. This seems to be borne out by the fact that it is a first principle or starting-point, since all other things that all men do are done for its sake and that which is the first principle and cause of things good we agree to be something honorable and divine.
Aristotle
A state is an association of similar persons whose aim is the best life possible. What is best is happiness, and to be happy is an active exercise of virtue and a complete employment of it.
Aristotle
Character is made by many acts it may be lost by a single one.
Aristotle
The right constitutions, three in number- kingship, aristocracy, and polity- and the deviations from these, likewise three in number - tyranny from kingship, oligarchy from aristocracy, democracy from polity.
Aristotle
Either a beast or a god.
Aristotle
Selfishness doesn't consist in a love to yourself, but in a big degree of such love.
Aristotle
It is the mark of an educated man to look for precision in each class of things just so far as the nature of the subject admits
Aristotle
Both oligarch and tyrant mistrust the people, and therefore deprive them of their arms.
Aristotle
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.
Aristotle
A friend is another I.
Aristotle
Man by nature wants to know.
Aristotle
Being a father is the most rewarding thing a man whose career has plateaued can do.
Aristotle