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Aristotle

Politics: A Treatise on Government

  • Tadesse Iyassuhas quoted2 months ago
    in another point of view,
  • Tadesse Iyassuhas quoted3 months ago
    wives in common who yet deliver their children to their respective fathers, being guided by their likeness to them. There are also some mares and cows which naturally bring forth their young so like the male, that we can easily distinguish by which of them they were impregnated: such was the mare called Just, in Pharsalia.
  • Tadesse Iyassuhas quoted3 months ago
    which he says it ought to take place; nor has he given any particular directions for putting it in practice. Now I also am willing
  • Tadesse Iyassuhas quoted3 months ago
    evident that if it is contracted too much, it will be no longer a city, for that necessarily supposes a multitude; so that if we proceed in this manner, we shall reduce a city to a family, and a family to a single person: for we admit that a family is one in a greater degree than a city, and a single person than a family; so that if this end could be obtained, it should never be put in practice, as it would annihilate the city; for a city does not only consist of a large number of inhabitants, but there must also be different sorts; for were they a
  • Tadesse Iyassuhas quoted3 months ago
    Since then every family is part of a city, and each of those individuals is part of a family, and the virtue of the parts ought to correspond to the virtue of the whole; it is necessary, that both the wives and children of the community should be instructed correspondent to the nature thereof, if it is of consequence to the virtue of the state, that the wives and children therein should be virtuous, and of consequence it certainly is, for the wives are one half of the free persons; and of the children the succeeding citizens are to be
  • Tadesse Iyassuhas quoted3 months ago
    The state is "a community of well-being in families and aggregations of families for the sake of a perfect and self-sufficing life."
  • Tadesse Iyassuhas quoted3 months ago
    is the legislator's task to frame a society which shall make the good life possible.
  • Michelle Roix Almirayhas quoted7 years ago
    gift of speech also evidently proves that man is a more social animal than the bees, or any of the herding cattle: for nature, as we say, does nothing in vain, and man is the only animal who enjoys it
  • Michelle Roix Almirayhas quoted7 years ago
    Voice indeed, as being the token of pleasure and pain,
  • Michelle Roix Almirayhas quoted7 years ago
    It is one of the most marked characteristics of Greek political theory that Plato and Aristotle think of the statesman as one who has knowledge of what ought to be done, and can help those who call him in to prescribe for them, rather than one who has power to control the forces of society.
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