"The most perfect political community is one in which the middle class is in control and outnumbers both of the other classes"
About this Quote
The subtext is frankly suspicious of extremes. Aristotle is writing in a Greek world where city-states ricocheted between oligarchy and democracy, coups and counter-coups. He watched Athens' volatility in the rearview mirror and treated stability as a moral good with practical prerequisites. "Control" here doesn't mean technocratic management; it means the ability to set norms, pick leaders, and stop factional capture. Outnumbering matters because it turns moderation into a structural fact, not a personal virtue. You can build a constitution that praises balance all day; if your demographics are lopsided, the incentives won't cooperate.
There's also a quiet elitism inside the praise. Aristotle's "middle" isn't today's broad consumer middle class; it's citizens with enough property to have skin in the game but not enough to treat the polis as a private asset. The line is less timeless wisdom than a warning: politics follows the distribution of security. Where the center collapses, the constitution becomes a tug-of-war, and the rope eventually snaps.
Quote Details
| Topic | Wisdom |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: Politics (Aristotle, 1944)
Evidence: It is clear therefore also that the political community administered by the middle class is the best, and that it is possible for those states to be well governed that are of the kind in which the middle class is numerous, and preferably stronger than both the other two classes, or at all events than one of them, for by throwing in its weight it sways the balance and prevents the opposite extremes from coming into existence. (Book IV, section 1295b (Bekker 1295b–1296a context); exact page depends on edition). The wording you provided (“The most perfect political community is one in which the middle class is in control, and outnumbers both of the other classes”) appears to be a modern paraphrase/retelling of Aristotle’s point in Politics Book IV (around Bekker 1295b). A primary-source match in a widely used English translation is the Loeb Classical Library translation by H. Rackham (published 1944). Ancient works don’t have a single ‘first published’ date in the modern sense; the stable way to cite the original is Aristotle, Politics, Book IV, Bekker 1295b (sometimes discussed together with 1296a–b). For a page number, you must specify the exact print edition/translator you are using, because pagination varies. Other candidates (1) The Murder of the Middle Class (Wayne Allyn Root, 2014) compilation95.9% ... The most perfect political community is one in which the middle class is in control , and outnumbers both of the ... |
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Aristotle. (2026, February 16). The most perfect political community is one in which the middle class is in control and outnumbers both of the other classes. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-most-perfect-political-community-is-one-in-29254/
Chicago Style
Aristotle. "The most perfect political community is one in which the middle class is in control and outnumbers both of the other classes." FixQuotes. February 16, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-most-perfect-political-community-is-one-in-29254/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"The most perfect political community is one in which the middle class is in control and outnumbers both of the other classes." FixQuotes, 16 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-most-perfect-political-community-is-one-in-29254/. Accessed 21 Feb. 2026.




