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Happiness involves engagement in activities that promote one's highest potentials.
Aristotle
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More quotes by Aristotle
The senses are gateways to the intelligence. There is nothing in the intelligence which did not first pass through the senses.
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It is not sufficient to know what one ought to say, but one must also know how to say it.
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Men are marked from the moment of birth to rule or be ruled.
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The perversions are as follows: of royalty, tyranny of aristocracy, oligarchy of constitutional government, democracy.
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The educated differ from the uneducated as much as the living from the dead.
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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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No one finds fault with defects which are the result of nature.
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Youth loves honor and victory more than money.
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These two rational faculties may be designated the Scientific Faculty and the Calculative Faculty respectively since calculation is the same as deliberation, and deliberation is never exercised about things that are invariable, so that the Calculative Faculty is a separate part of the rational half of the soul.
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Fortune favours the bold.
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The good of man is the active exercise of his soul's faculties. This exercise must occupy a complete lifetime. One swallow does make a spring, nor does one fine day. Excellence is a habit, not an event.
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Speeches are like babies-easy to conceive but hard to deliver.
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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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Without virtue it is difficult to bear gracefully the honors of fortune.
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It is true, indeed, that the account Plato gives in 'Timaeus' is different from what he says in his so-called 'unwritten teachings.'
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Men create the gods after their own images.
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We can't learn without pain.
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Nature makes nothing incomplete, and nothing in vain.
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So the good has been well explained as that at which all things aim.
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To learn is a natural pleasure, not confined to philosophers, but common to all men.
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