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[35]
Such then being the Great-souled man, the corresponding character on the side of
deficiency is the Small-souled man, and on that of excess the Vain man. These also1 are not thought to be actually vicious,
since they do no harm, but rather mistaken. The small-souled man deprives himself of the good things that he deserves; and his
failure to claim good things makes it seem that he has something bad about him
[and also that he does not know himself],2 for (people argue), if he deserved any
good, he would try to obtain it. Not that such persons are considered foolish, but rather
too retiring; yet this estimate of them is thought to make them still worse, for men's
ambitions show what they are worth, and if they hold aloof from noble enterprises and
pursuits, and for go the good things of life, presumably they think they are not worthy of
them.
Aristotle in 23 Volumes, Vol. 19, translated by H. Rackham. Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1934.
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