by N.S.
Gill
https://www.thoughtco.com/aristotle-quotes-117130
Aristotle was an Ancient Greek
philosopher who lived from 384-322 B.C.E. One of the most influential
philosophers, Aristotle's work was the foundational building blocks of all
Western philosophy to follow.
Courtesy
of translator Giles Laurén, author of The Stoic's Bible, here
is a list of 30 quotations from Aristotle from his Nicomachean Ethics.
Some of these may seem like noble goals to live by. Others may make you think
twice, especially if you don't consider yourself a philosopher, but are just
looking for age-tested ideas on how to live a better life.
Aristotle on Politics
- Politics appears to be the master art for it includes so many others and its purpose is the good of man. While it is worthy to perfect one man, it is finer and more godlike to perfect a nation.
- There are three prominent types of life: pleasure, political and contemplative. The mass of mankind is slavish in their tastes, preferring a life suitable to beasts; they have some ground for this view since they are imitating many of those in high places. People of superior refinement identify happiness with honour, or virtue, and generally the political life.
- Political
science spends most of its pains on forming its citizens to be of good
character and capable of noble acts.
Aristotle on Goodness
- Every art and
every inquiry and similarly every action and pursuit is thought to aim at
some good, and for this reason the good has been declared to be that at
which all things aim.
- If there is some
end in the things we do, which we desire for its own sake, clearly this
must be the chief good. Knowing this will have a great influence on how we
live our lives.
- If things are
good in themselves, the good will appear as something identical in them
all, but the accounts of the goodness in honour, wisdom, and pleasure
are diverse. The good therefore is not some common element answering to
one Idea.
- Even if there be
one good which is universally predictable or is capable of independent
existence, it could not be attained by man.
- If we consider
the function of man to be a certain kind of life, and this to be an
activity of the soul implying a rational principle, and the function of a
good man to be the noble performance of these, and if any action is well
performed when it is performed in accordance with the appropriate
principle; if this is the case, human good turns out to be activity of the
soul in accordance with virtue.
Aristotle on Happiness
- Men generally
agree that the highest good attainable by action is happiness, and
identify living well and doing well with happiness.
- The
self-sufficient we define as that which when isolated makes life desirable
and complete, and such we think happiness to be. It cannot be exceeded
and is therefore the end of action.
- Some identify
Happiness with virtue, some with practical wisdom, others with a kind of
philosophical wisdom, others add or exclude pleasure and yet others
include prosperity. We agree with those who identify happiness with
virtue, for virtue belongs with virtuous behaviour and virtue is
only known by its acts.
- Is happiness to
be acquired by learning, by habit, or some other form of training? It
seems to come as a result of virtue and some process of learning and to be
among the godlike things since its end is godlike and blessed.
- No happy man can
become miserable, for he will never do acts that are hateful and mean.
Aristotle on Education
- It is the mark
of an educated man to look for precision in each class of thing in so far
as its nature admits.
- Moral excellence
is concerned with pleasure and pain; because of pleasure we do bad things
and for fear of pain we avoid noble ones. For this reason we ought to be
trained from youth, as Plato says: to find pleasure and pain where we
ought; this is the purpose of education.
Aristotle on Wealth
- The life of
money-making is one undertaken under compulsion since wealth is not the
good we are seeking and is merely useful for the sake of something else.
Aristotle on Virtue
- Knowledge is not
necessary for the possession of the virtues, whereas the habits which
result from doing just and temperate acts count for all. By doing just
acts the just man is produced, by doing temperate acts, the temperate man;
without acting well no one can become good. Most people avoid good acts
and take refuge in theory and think that by becoming philosophers they
will become good.
- If the virtues
are neither passions nor facilities, all that remains is that they should
be states of character.
- Virtue is a
state of character concerned with choice, being determined by rational
principle as determined by the moderate man of practical wisdom.
- The end being
what we wish for, the means what we deliberate about and we choose our
actions voluntarily. The exercise of virtues is concerned with means and
therefore both virtue and vice are in our power.
Aristotle on Responsibility
- It is absurd to
make external circumstances responsible and not oneself, and to make
oneself responsible for noble acts and pleasant objects responsible for
base ones.
- We punish a man
for his ignorance if he is thought to be responsible for his ignorance.
- Everything done
by reason of ignorance is involuntary. The man who has acted in ignorance
has not acted voluntarily since he did not know what he was doing. Not
every wicked man is ignorant of what he ought to do and what he ought to
abstain from; by such errors men become unjust and bad.
Aristotle on Death
- Death is the
most terrible of all things, for it is the end, and nothing is thought to
be either good or bad for the dead.
Aristotle on Truth
- He must be open
in his hate and in his love, for to conceal one's feelings is to care less
for truth than for what people think and that is the coward's part. He
must speak and act openly because it is his to speak the truth.
- Each man speaks
and acts and lives according to his character. Falsehood is mean and
culpable and truth noble and worthy of praise. The man who is truthful
where nothing is at stake will be still more truthful where something is
at stake.
Aristotle on Economic Means
- All men agree
that a just distribution must be according to merit in some sense; they do
not all specify the same sort of merit, but democrats identify if with
freemen, supporters of oligarchy with wealth (or noble birth), and
supporters of aristocracy with excellence.
- When a
distribution is made from the common funds of a partnership it will be
according to the same ratio which the funds were put into the business by
the partners and any violation of this kind of justice would be injustice.
- People are
different and unequal and yet must be somehow equated. This is why all
things that are exchanged must be comparable and to this end money has
been introduced as an intermediate for it measures all things. In truth,
demand holds things together and without it there would be no exchange.
Aristotle on Government Structure
- There are three
kinds of constitution: monarchy, aristocracy, and that based on
property, timocratic. The best is monarchy, the worst timocracy. Monarchy
deviates to tyranny; the king looks to his people's interest; the tyrant
looks to his own. Aristocracy passes over to oligarchy by the badness of its
rulers who distribute contrary to equity what belongs to the city; most of
the good things go to themselves and office always to the same people,
paying most regard to wealth; thus the rulers are few and are bad men
instead of the most worthy. Timocracy passes over to democracy since both
are ruled by the majority.
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