Book
1 1 | force of his own nature and habits, and believing that he had
2 1 | knowledge of the natures and habits of men’s souls will be of
3 2 | which is given by suitable habits to the first instincts of
4 2 | whose natures, or ways, or habits are unsuited to them, cannot
5 2 | natures are right and their habits wrong, or whose habits are
6 2 | their habits wrong, or whose habits are right and their natures
7 4 | we should not teach bad habits, least of all to the best
8 5 | mean states of all these habits are by far the safest and
9 5 | man of experience and good habits. For in such an order of
10 5 | to health and temperate habits, that law must clearly be
11 6 | should have been trained in habits of law, and be well educated,
12 7 | the gifts of nature by bad habits.~Education has two branches—
13 7 | management of our bodies and the habits of our minds—true of all
14 11| will not readily fall into habits of unbridled shamelessness
15 11| repugnant to the laws and habits of the living and to their
16 11| and to their own previous habits, if a person were simply
17 12| studies and dispositions and habits are well fitted for the
|