| Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
| Alphabetical [« »] principles 25 prior 6 prisoners 3 private 34 privilege 6 privileged 2 privileges 4 | Frequency [« »] 34 hold 34 judge 34 person 34 private 34 revolution 34 rulers 34 vote | Aristotle Politics IntraText - Concordances private |
Book, Paragraph
1 II, V | among individuals for their private use; this is a form of common 2 II, V | but, as a general rule, private; for, when everyone has 3 II, V | that property should be private, but the use of it common; 4 II, V | rendered when a man has private property. These advantages 5 II, V | out of the possession of private property. These evils, however, 6 II, V | the vast numbers who have private property.~Again, we ought 7 II, V | women common, and retains private property, the men will see 8 II, VII | have been proposed; some by private persons, others by philosophers 9 II, VIII| sacred, one public, the third private: the first was set apart 10 II, VIII| they cultivate for their private benefit. Again, as to this 11 II, X | their own colleagues, or of private individuals; and they are 12 II, XII | passed their lives in a private station; about most of them, 13 III, IV | not endure to live in a private station. But, on the other 14 III, VII | rule with a view to the private interest, whether of the 15 III, XI | occupations and arts in which private persons share in the ability 16 IV, XVI | raised by magistrates or by private persons; the fifth decides 17 V, IV | power to the state, whether private citizens, or magistrates, 18 V, V | demagogues, who either in their private capacity lay information 19 V, VI | the oligarchs waste their private property by extravagant 20 V, VIII| innovations creep in through the private life of individuals also, 21 V, VIII| having leisure for their private business—but what irritates 22 V, X | except as conducive to his private ends; his aim is pleasure, 23 VI, II | accounts, the constitution, and private contracts; that the assembly 24 VI, IV | should be established; the private rites of families should 25 VI, VIII| embellishment of public and private buildings, the maintaining 26 VI, VIII| Another officer registers all private contracts, and decisions 27 VII, II | statesmen and rulers as by private individuals. Others, again, 28 VII, X | requisite sum out of their private means, and to provide also 29 VII, X | one public and the other private, and each part should be 30 VII, X | common meals; while of the private land, part should be near 31 VII, X | individuals, and employed in the private estates of men of property, 32 VII, XI | places. The arrangement of private houses is considered to 33 VII, XVII| concern of the state or of private individuals, which latter 34 VIII, I | should be public, and not private—not as at present, when