The Complete Works of Aristotle. Illustrated
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автордың кітабынан сөз тіркестері  The Complete Works of Aristotle. Illustrated

Aziz Tahmazov
Aziz Tahmazovдәйексөз келтірді2 апта бұрын
People may be led on to wrong others by either of these motives or feelings; but no man by both-they will affect people of quite opposite characters
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Aziz Tahmazov
Aziz Tahmazovдәйексөз келтірді2 апта бұрын
Thus every action must be due to one or other of seven causes: chance, nature, compulsion, habit, reasoning, anger, or appetite.
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Aziz Tahmazov
Aziz Tahmazovдәйексөз келтірді3 апта бұрын
That which does not need something else is more self-sufficing than that which does, and presents itself as a greater good for that reason.
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Aziz Tahmazov
Aziz Tahmazovдәйексөз келтірді3 ай бұрын
Another line of argument is this: The things people approve of openly are not those which they approve of secretly: openly, their chief praise is given to justice and nobleness; but in their hearts they prefer their own advantage. Try, in face of this, to establish the point of view which your opponent has not adopted. This is the most effective of the forms of argument that contradict common opinion
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Aziz Tahmazov
Aziz Tahmazovдәйексөз келтірді3 ай бұрын
They are too fond of themselves; this is one form that small-mindedness takes. Because of this, they guide their lives too much by considerations of what is useful and too little by what is noble-for the useful is what is good for oneself, and the noble what is good absolutely.
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Aziz Tahmazov
Aziz Tahmazovдәйексөз келтірді4 ай бұрын
Anger may be defined as an impulse, accompanied by pain, to a conspicuous revenge for a conspicuous slight directed without justification towards what concerns oneself or towards what concerns one’s friends.
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Aziz Tahmazov
Aziz Tahmazovдәйексөз келтірді4 ай бұрын
Equity bids us be merciful to the weakness of human nature; to think less about the laws than about the man who framed them, and less about what he said than about what he meant; not to consider the actions of the accused so much as his intentions, nor this or that detail so much as the whole story; to ask not what a man is now but what he has always or usually been. It bids us remember benefits rather than injuries, and benefits received rather than benefits conferred; to be patient when we are wronged; to settle a dispute by negotiation and not by force; to prefer arbitration to motion-for an arbitrator goes by the equity of a case, a judge by the strict law, and arbitration was invented with the express purpose of securing full power for equity.
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Aziz Tahmazov
Aziz Tahmazovдәйексөз келтірді4 ай бұрын
For all men guard against ordinary offences, just as they guard against ordinary diseases; but no one takes precautions against a disease that nobody has ever had
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