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Politics & Power Quote by Aristotle

"Man is by nature a political animal"

About this Quote

Aristotle’s line lands like a calm diagnosis, but it’s also a boundary marker: to be fully human is to belong to a polis, not merely to survive as a solitary organism. “Political” here isn’t campaign posters and partisan brawls; it’s the thick web of speech, law, obligation, and shared judgment that turns a crowd into a community. The provocation is that politics isn’t a hobby layered onto “real life.” It is the arena where “real life” becomes legible as justice, honor, duty, and the good.

The subtext is quietly polemical. Aristotle is pushing back against two temptations: the fantasy of radical self-sufficiency and the idea that the household economy is enough. For him, the household meets needs; the city makes a life worth wanting. That’s why he can claim that someone who can live without the polis is either “a beast or a god.” It’s a rhetorical squeeze play: opt out, and you’re not admirably independent, you’re less (or inhumanly more) than human.

Context matters. Aristotle is writing in a Greek world of city-states, citizenship, public deliberation, slavery, and exclusion. The “man” of the line is not everyone; it’s implicitly the free male citizen with standing to speak. That limitation is part of the quote’s charge today: it names how political belonging can be treated as nature while being rationed as privilege.

It works because it reframes politics as anthropology. If your nature includes argument, persuasion, and rule-making, then depoliticizing yourself isn’t neutral; it’s a kind of self-amputation.

Quote Details

TopicWisdom
Source
Verified source: Politics (Aristotle, -350)
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
From these things therefore it is clear that the city-state is a natural growth, and that man is by nature a political animal, and a man that is by nature and not merely by fortune citiless is either low in the scale of humanity or above it (Book I, Chapter 2 (Bekker 1253a2–3)). This is the primary-source locus for the modern quotation “Man is by nature a political animal,” in Aristotle’s Politics (Greek: ὁ ἄνθρωπος φύσει πολιτικὸν ζῷον). The most standard way to pinpoint the passage across editions is by Bekker numbering: Pol. I.2, 1253a2–3. The original work (4th century BCE; commonly dated to roughly mid-4th century BCE) was not “published” in the modern sense; it survives via manuscript transmission and later printed editions. The wording above is an English translation appearing in a public-domain/online transcription; other standard translations (e.g., Jowett; Rackham/Loeb; Lord) render the same Greek slightly differently (sometimes “social animal”). The exact phrase “Man is by nature a political animal” is a shortened extract of the longer sentence quoted here.
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Aristotle. (2026, February 9). Man is by nature a political animal. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/man-is-by-nature-a-political-animal-29232/

Chicago Style
Aristotle. "Man is by nature a political animal." FixQuotes. February 9, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/man-is-by-nature-a-political-animal-29232/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Man is by nature a political animal." FixQuotes, 9 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/man-is-by-nature-a-political-animal-29232/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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Aristotle

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

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