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There is nothing unequal as the equal treatment of unequals.
Aristotle
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More quotes by Aristotle
The least initial deviation from the truth is multiplied later a thousandfold.
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The best way to teach morality is to make it a habit with children.
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Boundaries don't protect rivers, people do.
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...happiness is an activity and a complete utilization of virtue, not conditionally but absolutely.
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Each human being is bred with a unique set of potentials that yearn to be fulfilled as surely as the acorn yearns to become the oak within it.
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A body in motion can maintain this motion only if it remains in contact with a mover.
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By 'life,' we mean a thing that can nourish itself and grow and decay.
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When...we, as individuals, obey laws that direct us to behave for the welfare of the community as a whole, we are indirectly helping to promote the pursuit of happiness by our fellow human beings.
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Anything whose presence or absence makes no discernible difference is no essential part of the whole.
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If the hammer and the shuttle could move themselves, slavery would be unnecessary.
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The aim of art is to represent not the outward appearance of things, but their inward significance.
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...virtue is not merely a state in conformity with the right principle, but one that implies the right principle and the right principle in moral conduct is prudence.
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Hence both women and children must be educated with an eye to the constitution, if indeed it makes any difference to the virtue of a city-state that its children be virtuous, and its women too. And it must make a difference, since half the free population are women, and from children come those who participate in the constitution.
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Excellence or virtue is a settled disposition of the mind that determines our choice of actions and emotions and consists essentially in observing the mean relative to us ... a mean between two vices, that which depends on excess and that which depends on defect.
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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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The aim of education is to make the pupil like and dislike what he ought....The little human animal will not at first have the right responses. It must be trained to feel pleasure, liking, disgust, and hatred at those things which really are pleasant, likable, disgusting, and hateful.
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The many are more incorruptible than the few they are like the greater quantity of water which is less easily corrupted than a little.
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All that one gains by falsehood is, not to be believed when he speaks the truth.
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For good is simple, evil manifold.
Aristotle
And it is characteristic of man that he alone has any sense of good and evil, of just and unjust, and the like, and the association of living beings who have this sense makes family and a state.
Aristotle