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Alphabetical    [«  »]
maintained 15
maintaining 4
maintenance 4
majority 31
make 92
maker 1
makers 1
Frequency    [«  »]
32 third
31 know
31 limit
31 majority
31 opposite
30 easily
30 father
Aristotle
Politics

IntraText - Concordances

majority

   Book, Paragraph
1 II, V | are not guardians are the majority, and about them nothing 2 III, V | foreigners, and therefore the majority of them are so now. The 3 III, V | mechanic may, for an actual majority of them are rich. At Thebes 4 III, X | has been taken, and the majority divide anew the property 5 III, XIII| more than one, but not a majority, is stronger than the many, 6 III, XV | need only suppose that the majority are good men and good citizens, 7 IV, I | is adapted to the great majority of men (4). And if a man 8 IV, IV | in every government, the majority rules; nor again is oligarchy 9 IV, IV | government, in which the rich majority have no share of office, 10 IV, IV | who are also poor and the majority, govern, and an oligarchy 11 IV, IV | since the people are the majority, and the opinion of the 12 IV, IV | and the opinion of the majority is decisive, such a government 13 IV, V | although they form the majority, have no share in the government, 14 IV, VI | governed by the poor, who are a majority, and not by the laws.~So 15 IV, VI | form is that in which the majority of the citizens have some 16 IV, VIII| exists the right of the majority, and whatever seems good 17 IV, VIII| whatever seems good to the majority of those who share in the 18 IV, IX | through the good will of a majority—they might be equally well-disposed 19 IV, XI | to the life in which the majority are able to share, and to 20 IV, XIV | oligarchies; the veto of the majority should be final, their assent 21 V, III | share in the state are the majority, they revolt, because they 22 V, IX | democracy, the government of the majority and freedom. Men think that 23 V, XII | democracy, if the poor form the majority; and a democracy may change 24 V, XII | thought that all, or the majority of them, were originally 25 VI, II | whence it follows that the majority must be supreme, and that 26 VI, II | supreme, and that whatever the majority approve must be the end 27 VI, II | them, and the will of the majority is supreme. This, then, 28 VI, III | justice is that to which the majority agree, oligarchs that to 29 VI, III | justice is the will of the majority, as I was before saying, 30 VI, III | whatever is decided by the majority of the citizens is to be 31 VII, II | desirable for all, or for a majority only? Since the good of


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