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Love Quote by Aristotle

"For though we love both the truth and our friends, piety requires us to honor the truth first"

About this Quote

Loyalty is flattering, but Aristotle reminds you it can also be a trap. The line has the chill of a corrective: you may cherish your friends, your teachers, your tribe, yet your highest duty is to reality as it is, not as your circle prefers it. The phrasing is carefully calibrated. "Though we love" grants the emotional facts without romanticizing them; he knows attachment is not an error but a human baseline. Then comes the pivot: "piety requires". Aristotle borrows moral-religious language to give epistemology teeth. Truth isn’t just useful; it’s owed.

The subtext is unmistakably academic and political at once. In Aristotle's world, philosophy is a communal project built on reverence for mentors and inherited systems. But it’s also competitive, full of reputations that can harden into dogma. This sentence quietly justifies disagreement with revered figures (read: Plato) without framing it as betrayal. It’s a permission slip to criticize your own side while claiming the higher virtue of integrity.

Context matters because Aristotle’s method depends on disciplined inquiry: start from received opinions, test them, revise. Friendship, for him, is a moral good and a civic glue. He’s not dismissing it; he’s ranking it. The intent is to install a hierarchy that keeps affection from becoming an epistemic veto. In any era, it’s an antidote to the oldest intellectual corruption: confusing allegiance with accuracy, and calling it virtue.

Quote Details

TopicTruth
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Honoring Truth Over Friendship: Aristotle's Ethical Insight
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Aristotle

Aristotle (384 BC - 322 BC) was a Philosopher from Greece.

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