Aristotle continues:

'What a man wants to be, is better than what a man wants to seem (to be), for in aiming at that he is aiming more at reality'.

Here Plato would focus on the ethical reasoning of being rather than seeming, while Aristotle is primarily concerned with alignment to reality.

'And it is also natural for all to delight in works of imitation.'

/ Aristotle, Poetics, Chap 3, 1448-b-9

Aristotle's remark here relates to delighting in realistic representations of things. He points out that we learn something from observing a realistic imitation. Aristotle continues by observing that learning is the 'greatest of pleasures'.

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