ARISTOTLE QUOTES X

Greek philosopher (384 B.C. - 322 B.C.)

The necessity of perpetuating the species, forms the combining principle between males and females; a principle independent of choice or design, and alike incident to animals and to plants, which are all naturally impelled to propagate their respective kinds.

ARISTOTLE

Politics


The greater the length, the more beautiful will the piece be by reason of its size, provided that the whole be perspicuous.

ARISTOTLE

Poetics


A beginning is that which does not itself follow anything by causal necessity, but after which something naturally is or comes to be.

ARISTOTLE

Poetics

Tags: beginning


Man, when perfected, is the best of animals, but when separated from law and justice, he is the worst of all.

ARISTOTLE

Politics


Beauty is the gift from God.

ARISTOTLE

Nicomachean Ethics

Tags: beauty


To learn gives the liveliest pleasure, not only to philosophers but to men in general.

ARISTOTLE

Poetics

Tags: learning


For the things we have to learn before we can do them, we learn by doing them.

ARISTOTLE

The Nicomachean Ethics


The instinct of imitation is implanted in man from childhood, one difference between him and other animals being that he is the most imitative of creatures; and through imitation he learns his earliest lessons.

ARISTOTLE

Poetics


It would then be most admirably adapted to the purposes of justice, if laws properly enacted were, as far as circumstances admitted, of themselves to mark out all cases, and to abandon as few as possible to the discretion of the judge.

ARISTOTLE

Rhetoric

Tags: law


Now ends clearly differ from one another. For, firstly, in some cases the end is an act, while in others it is a material result beyond and besides that act. And, where the action involves any such end beyond itself, this end is of necessity better than is the act by which it is produced.

ARISTOTLE

Nicomachean Ethics


Man delights in society far more than do bees or herds.

ARISTOTLE

Politics

Tags: society


Now there are two ways in which fire outside the body can, as we see, come to an end, namely, exhaustion and extinction. By exhaustion we mean that termination which is produced by the fire itself; by extinction, that which is produced by the contraries of fire.

ARISTOTLE

On Youth & Old Age, Life & Death


Happiness consists in the consciousness of a life in which the highest Virtue is actively manifested.

ARISTOTLE

Nicomachean Ethics

Tags: happiness


Comedy aims at representing men as worse, Tragedy as better than in actual life.

ARISTOTLE

Poetics


Nothing can be truly just which is inconsistent with humanity.

ARISTOTLE

Politics

Tags: humanity


But most important of all is the structure of the incidents. For Tragedy is an imitation, not of men, but of an action and of life, and life consists in action.

ARISTOTLE

Poetics


Poetry is finer and more philosophical than history; for poetry expresses the universal, and history only the particular.

ARISTOTLE

Poetics

Tags: poetry


Since the objects of imitation are men in action, and these men must be either of a higher or a lower type (for moral character mainly answers to these divisions, goodness and badness being the distinguishing marks of moral differences), it follows that we must represent men either as better than in real life, or as worse, or as they are.

ARISTOTLE

Poetics


If, then, God is always in that good state in which we sometimes are, this compels our wonder; and if in a better this compels it yet more. And God is in a better state. And life also belongs to God; for the actuality of thought is life, and God is that actuality; and God's self-dependent actuality is life most good and eternal.

ARISTOTLE

Metaphysics

Tags: God


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.

ARISTOTLE

Nicomachean Ethics