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that of wasting one's substance; for he who is ruined by his
own agency is a hopeless case indeed,1 and to
waste one's substance seems to be in a way to ruin oneself, inasmuch as wealth is the
means of life. This then is the sense in which the term Prodigality is here
understood.1.
[6]
Now riches are an article of use; but articles of use can be used either well or ill, and
he who uses a thing best is he who possesses the virtue related to that thing; therefore
that man will use riches best who possesses the virtue related to wealth; and this is the
liberal man. 1.
[7]
But the use
of wealth seems to consist in spending and in giving; getting wealth and keeping it are
modes of acquisition rather than of use. Hence the liberal man is more concerned with
giving to the right recipients than with getting wealth from the right sources and not
getting it from the wrong ones. Virtue is displayed in doing good rather than in having
good done to one, and in performing noble acts rather than in avoiding base ones;
1.
[8]
but manifestly doing
good and acting nobly go with giving, while having good done to one and avoiding base
actions go with getting. Again, gratitude is bestowed on a giver, not on one who refrains
from taking; and still more is this true of praise. 1.
[9]
Also it is easier not to take than to give: men are
more reluctant to give away what belongs to them than to refrain from taking what belongs
to someone else. 1.
[10]
Again,
it is those who give whom we call liberal; those who refrain from taking2 are not