Timeless quotes on women: Difference between revisions

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{{Quote|"Woman may be said to be an inferior man."|''Poetics, XV''}}
{{Quote|"Woman may be said to be an inferior man."|''Poetics, XV''}}
{{Quote|"Females are weaker and colder in nature, and we must look upon the female character as being a sort of natural deficiency."|''On the Generation of Animals''}}
{{Quote|"Females are weaker and colder in nature, and we must look upon the female character as being a sort of natural deficiency."|''On the Generation of Animals''}}
{{Quote|"Again, as between the sexes, the male is by nature superior and the female inferior, the male ruler and the female subject."|''Politics, Book I''}}
{{Quote|"For the male is more fitted to rule than the female, unless conditions are quite contrary to nature; and the elder and fully grown is more fitted than the younger and undeveloped."|Arist., ''Politica'', trans. T.A Sinclair, Third Edition (1992), Penguin, London, I, XII, 1259b1.}}
{{Quote|"Clearly, then, moral virtue belongs to all of them; but the temperance of a man and of a woman, of the courage and justice of a man and of a woman, are not, as  Socrates maintained, the same; the courage of a man is shown in commanding, of a woman in obeying.|''Politics, Book I''}}
{{Quote|"Clearly, then, moral virtue belongs to all of them; but the temperance of a man and of a woman, of the courage and justice of a man and of a woman, are not, as  Socrates maintained, the same; the courage of a man is shown in commanding, of a woman in obeying.|''Politics, Book I''}}
Quote|"All classes must be deemed to have their special attributes; as the poet says of women, 'Silence is a woman's glory'',but this is not equally the glory of man."|
{{Quote|"Again, the freedom in regard to women (referring to the customs of the Spartans) is detrimental both in regard to the purpose of the constitution and in regard to the happiness of the state. For just as man and wife are part of a household, it is clear that the state also is divided nearly in half into its male and female population, so that in all constitutions in which the position of the women is badly regulated one half of the state must be deemed to have been neglected in framing the law."|''Politics, Book II''}}
{{Quote|"Again, the freedom in regard to women (referring to the customs of the Spartans) is detrimental both in regard to the purpose of the constitution and in regard to the happiness of the state. For just as man and wife are part of a household, it is clear that the state also is divided nearly in half into its male and female population, so that in all constitutions in which the position of the women is badly regulated one half of the state must be deemed to have been neglected in framing the law."|''Politics, Book II''}}
{{Quote|"Hence this characteristic existed among the Spartans, and in the time of their empire many things were controlled by the women; what difference does it make whether women rule, or the rulers are ruled by women? The result is the same."|''Politics, Book II''}}
{{Quote|"Hence this characteristic existed among the Spartans, and in the time of their empire many things were controlled by the women; what difference does it make whether women rule, or the rulers are ruled by women? The result is the same."|''Politics, Book II''}}
{{Quote|
==Circa 300 BC-400 AD: The Jataka Tales==
==Circa 300 BC-400 AD: The Jataka Tales==
{{Quote|"Cursed be the dart of love that works men pain! Cursed be the land where women rule supreme!
{{Quote|"Cursed be the dart of love that works men pain! Cursed be the land where women rule supreme!

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