Sunday, December 22, 2024 Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 licence.

Plato

« All quotes from this author
 

In Plato and to a lesser extent in Aristotle we read that practical concerns are low and vulgar. It follows that business, as an inherently practical enterprise, is hardly worthy of esteem. Given the place of Plato and Aristotle on the intellectual landscape, we have a partial explanation of the disdain that members of the cultural elite have always exhibited toward business.
--
Stephen Hicks (2003). “Ayn Rand and Contemporary Business Ethics.”Journal of Accounting, Ethics & Public Policy, Volume 3, Number 1 (Winter 2003), pp. 1?26

 
Plato

» Plato - all quotes »



Tags: Plato Quotes, Authors starting by P


Similar quotes

 

Through Plato, Aristotle came to believe in God; but Plato never attempted to prove His reality. Aristotle had to do so. Plato contemplated Him; Aristotle produced arguments to demonstrate Him. Plato never defined Him; but Aristotle thought God through logically, and concluded with entire satisfaction to himself that He was the Unmoved Mover.

 
Edith Hamilton
 

[Aristotle] was the most eminent of all the pupils of Plato.... He seceded from Plato while he was still alive; so that they tell a story that [Plato] said, "Aristotle has kicked us off, just as chickens do their mother after they have been hatched."

 
Plato
 

[Aristotle] totally misrepresents Plato's doctrine of "Ideas." ... It is also pertinent to inquire, what is the difference between the "formal cause" of Aristotle and the archetypal ideas of Plato? ... Yet Aristotle is forever congratulating himself that he alone has properly treated the "formal" and the "final cause"!

 
Aristotle
 

That teaching according to which intellectual activity is worthy of esteem to the extent that it is practical and to that extent alone.

 
Julien Benda
 

But why had science lost its way in the first place? What appeal could these teachings of Pythagoras and Plato have had for their contemporaries? They provided, I believe, an intellectually respectable justification for a corrupt social order. The mercantile tradition that had led to Ionian science also led to a slave economy. You could get richer if you owned a lot of slaves. Athens in the time of Plato and Aristotle had a vast slave population. All that brave Athenian talk about democracy applied only to a privileged few.

 
Carl Sagan
© 2009–2013Quotes Privacy Policy | Contact