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Metaphor is halfway between the unintelligible and the commonplace.
Aristotle
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Aristotle
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More quotes by Aristotle
If, therefore, there is any one superior in virtue and in the power of performing the best actions, him we ought to follow and obey, but he must have the capacity for action as well as virtue.
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The weak are always anxious for justice and equality. The strong pay no heed to either.
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There is no such thing as committing adultery with the right woman, at the right time, and in the right way, for it is simply WRONG.
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Where some people are very wealthy and others have nothing, the result will be either extreme democracy or absolute oligarchy, or despotism will come from either of those excesses.
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It is clear that those constitutions which aim at the common good are right, as being in accord with absolute justice while those which aim only at the good of the rulers are wrong.
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The science that studies the supreme good for man is politics.
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The shape of the heaven is of necessity spherical for that is the shape most appropriate to its substance and also by nature primary.
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For good is simple, evil manifold.
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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
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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.
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We do not know a truth without knowing its cause.
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Some vices miss what is right because they are deficient, others because they are excessive, in feelings or in actions, while virtue finds and chooses the mean.
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For one swallow does not make a summer, nor does one day and so too one day, or a short time, does not make a man blessed and happy.
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For it is not true, as some treatise-mongers lay down in their systems, of the probity of the speaker, that it contributes nothing to persuasion but moral character nearly, I may say, carries with it the most sovereign efficacy in making credible.
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These virtues are formed in man by his doing the actions ... The good of man is a working of the soul in the way of excellence in a complete life.
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Quid quid movetur ab alio movetur(nothing moves without having been moved).
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[Meanness] is more ingrained in man's nature than Prodigality the mass of mankind are avaricious rather than open-handed.
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We must not feel a childish disgust at the investigations of the meaner animals. For there is something marvelous in all natural things.
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A likely impossibility is always preferable to an unconvincing possibility.
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Music directly imitates the passions or states of the soul...when one listens to music that imitates a certain passion, he becomes imbued withthe same passion and if over a long time he habitually listens to music that rouses ignoble passions, his whole character will be shaped to an ignoble form.
Aristotle