Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
prytanis 1
psammetichus 1
puberty 1
public 62
punished 4
punishment 4
punishments 3
Frequency    [«  »]
63 certain
63 constitutional
63 whereas
62 public
62 whole
61 case
61 oligarchies
Aristotle
Politics

IntraText - Concordances

public

   Book, Paragraph
1 I, XI | even more so; hence some public men devote themselves entirely 2 II, VII | of women and children, or public tables for women: other 3 II, VII | all the artisans are to be public slaves and not to form a 4 II, VII | that artisans are to be public slaves, it should only apply 5 II, VII | apply to those engaged on public works, as at Epidamnus, 6 II, VIII| three parts, one sacred, one public, the third private: the 7 II, VIII| should be maintained at the public expense, as if such an enactment 8 II, VIII| over the interests of the public, of strangers, and of orphans. 9 II, VIII| lands, and those of the public as well, they will have 10 II, VIII| under pretense of doing a public service, a man may introduce 11 II, IX | guilty of partiality in public affairs. And therefore they 12 II, IX | have been provided at the public cost, as in Crete; but among 13 II, X | and cattle raised on the public lands, and of the tribute 14 II, XII | taken any part at all in public affairs, but have passed 15 III, V | with others, the conduct of public affairs.~ 16 III, VI | is to be gained from the public revenues and from office, 17 III, XIV | state has the disposal of public matters; this form corresponds 18 III, XV | enriched themselves out of the public treasury; riches became 19 IV, IX | have the same food at their public tables, and the rich wear 20 IV, XI | their own advantage, of the public not at all. For these reasons 21 IV, XIV | which deliberates about public affairs; secondly (2) that 22 IV, XIV | by democracies in their public assemblies, for they will 23 V, III | of individuals or of the public. It is evident, again, what 24 V, V | enemies), or coming forward in public stir up the people against 25 V, V | incomes by the imposition of public services, and sometimes 26 V, VIII| rulers are stealing the public money; then they are doubly 27 V, VIII| not want money from the public treasury, will be able to 28 V, VIII| avoid peculation of the public money, the transfer of the 29 V, VIII| undertaking expensive and useless public services, such as the giving 30 V, IX | make him do what is for the public interest. But may not men 31 V, IX | of the interests of the public?~Speaking generally, we 32 V, X | repeated, has no regard to any public interest, except as conducive 33 V, X | Peisistratidae arose out of the public dishonor offered to the 34 V, XI | in the city to appear in public and live at his gates; then 35 V, XI | should pretend a care of the public revenues, and not waste 36 V, XI | seem to be a steward of the public rather than a tyrant; nor 37 V, XI | collect taxes and to require public services only for state 38 V, XI | not to him, but to the public. He should appear, not harsh, 39 VI, IV | restricted and converted into public ones; in short, every contrivance 40 VI, V | condemned should not be public and go into the treasury 41 VI, V | classes, the proceeds of the public revenues should be accumulated 42 VI, V | be excused from useless public services. By administering 43 VI, VII | sacrifices or erect some public edifice, and then the people 44 VI, VIII| supervision and embellishment of public and private buildings, the 45 VI, VIII| decisions of the courts, all public indictments, and also all 46 VI, VIII| who are on the register of public debtors. Some sentences 47 VI, VIII| these offices handle the public money, there must of necessity 48 VI, VIII| example, superintendents of public worship, guardians of shrines, 49 VI, VIII| for the performance of the public sacrifices, except any which 50 VI, VIII| derive their dignity from the public hearth of the city. They 51 VI, VIII| those which preside over the public deliberations of the state. 52 VII, VIII| deciding what is for the public interest, and what is just 53 VII, X | worship should likewise be a public charge. The land must therefore 54 VII, X | divided into two parts, one public and the other private, and 55 VII, X | subdivided, part of the public land being appropriated 56 VII, X | the border to take part in public deliberations about wars 57 VII, XII | the priests, for whom public tables should likewise be 58 VII, XII | established near an agora and some public place of meeting; the neighborhood 59 VII, XVII| privilege of reclining at the public tables, should be disgraced 60 VII, XVII| of an age to sit at the public tables and to drink strong 61 VIII, I | all, and that it should be public, and not private—not as 62 VIII, II | be the character of this public education, and how young


IntraText® (V89) Copyright 1996-2007 EuloTech SRL