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Aristotle Quotes about Motivational

All Aristotle Quotes Accidents Acting Adultery Adventure Adversity Affection Age Ambition Anger Arguing Art Atheism Beauty Being Happy Belief Birth Bravery Business Character Children Choices Community Conformity Consciousness Constitution Contemplation Courage Creation Creativity Crime Culture Democracy Depression Desire Destiny Dignity Discipline Diversity Doubt Drinking Earth Education Effort Envy Equality Ethics Evil Excellence Exercise Failure Family Fate Fear Feelings Freedom Friends Friendship Funny Genius Giving God Gold Goodness Graduation Gratitude Greatness Greek Growth Happiness Happy Hate Hatred Heart Heaven History Honesty Honor Hope Human Nature Ignorance Imagination Immortality Injustice Insanity Inspiration Inspirational Inspiring Integrity Joy Judging Justice Kindness Knowledge Laughter Leadership Learning Liberty Life Literature Logic Love Lying Madness Making Money Management Mankind Math Meaning Of Life Meditation Memories Metaphor Metaphysics Military Money Motivation Motivational quotes Myth Nature Obedience Office Overcoming Pain Passion Past Peace Perception Perfection Perseverance Persuasion Philanthropy Philosophy Plato Pleasure Politics Positive Poverty Power Praise Prosperity Prudence Purpose Quality Rebellion Religion Responsibility Revenge Revolution Running Sacrifice School Science Simplicity Slavery Social Justice Society Son Soul Sports Spring Students Study Style Success Suffering Summer Talent Teaching Time Tragedy Training Truth Understanding Unity Values Victory Virtue War Water Wealth Wife Winning Wisdom Wit Work Writing Youth

It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it.

Attributed to Aristotle in "Religion and the Pursuit of Truth" by Lowell Lindsay Bennion, p. 52, 1959.

The hardest victory is the victory over self.

Socrates, Plato, Aristotle (1967). “Wit and Wisdom of Socrates, Plato, Aristotle: Being a Treasury of Thousands of Glorious, Inspiring and Imperishable Thoughts, Views and Observations of the Three Great Greek Philosophers, Classified Under about Four Hundred Subjects for Comparative Study”