Title: Aristotle
1 Aristotles Nicomachean Ethics
- The good what all things aim at
- We study Ethics, not merely to know, but to
attain the good to live good lives
2 The Good for Man Eudaimonia
- complete, sufficient
- a fulfilling human life
- human ergon think on/lead a good life
- a teleological ethics
- Defn rational activity with virtue
- focused on the goal how to make my life
good/fulfilling?
3 Major Claims
- Ethics quest for the good
- The good happiness-in-rational activity
- Possible to attain in a life of virtuous
activities together with friends
4Contrasting ethical theories
- Ancient
- Relativism
- Universalism
- Command theories
- Divine Command
- Polis laws
- Hedonism
- Eudaimonist
- Socrates?/Stoics virtue alone happiness
- Callicles dominance virtue happiness
- Modern
- Relativism
- Existentialism (authenticity-ethics)
- Universalism
- Deontology (Kant categorical imperative)
- Utilitarianism (Mill the greater good)
5Contrasting Ethical Claims
- ARISTOTELIANS
- vs. KANTIANS
- Ethics ideal way of life, not principles of
action - C.I. does not work
- Justice constitutive of happiness
- Self-fulfillment in virtue, even in e.g. war
- vs. UTILITARIANS
- Pleasure subjective aspect of good
- Good is happiness, not pleasure
- Self-sacrifice for greater good may not be
just but may be for enlarged self
- KANTIANS
- Categorical Imperative ? Universal Moral Rules
- Possible conflict bet. Moral duty vs. Happiness
- Virtue means to Duty, not ends
- UTILITARIANS
- Utility /Greatest Good Highest ethical
principle - Good pleasure or greatest happiness
- Conflict bet. personal happiness vs. greater good
(including others)
6 Virtue (arete)
- Moral Stages
- Mature, rational person
- Chooses own goals, values
- Moral intellectual virtue
- Maturing self
- Obedient to moral guidance, sense of honor
- Moral-behavioral virtues
- Immature ego
- Acts on impulse/feelings
- Opposes morals
- Moral Ed changes
- immature ego ?
- moral self ?
- rational person
- Virtues of character (moral virtues)
- Courage
- Temperance
- Justice
- Virtues of mind (intellectual virtues)
- Practical wisdom (phronesis)
- Philosophical wisdom (sophia)
- Interpersonal virtue
- Friendship (philia)
7 Moral development
- Actions
- Voluntary vs. coerced, done in ignorance
- Chosen
- ? habits of choice, character
- Virtue involves
- Knowing the act
- Choosing it for its own sake
- A consistent state of character
8Freedom and Responsibility (III.5)
- Aristotle
- If you know the particulars and
- You are not coerced then
- You are responsible, even if you dont
deliberately choose to do it. - But if actions arise from character, and it from
how we are raised, are we really free? - Aristotles reply
- Either we are co-responsible
- Or, if not, we must still reward and punish to
bring out what is better
9 Definition of Moral Virtue (II.6)
- A habit or state of character that expresses a
choice - Which finds a mean relative to us
- As determined by rational principle, ie. guided
by values a morally wise person would see are at
stake
10 The Doctrine of the Mean
- Virtue (of character) involves striking a mean
between extremes of action and passion. - Excess having too much of something
- Deficiency having too little of something.
- The mean is not mediocrity, but harmony and
balance.
11Deficiency Cowardice VIRTUE COURAGE Excess Rashness
Self-indulgent (drunken, glutton, promiscuous) TEMPERANCE (healthy moderation) Anhedonic (incapable of enjoying pleasure)
Cheapness GENEROSITY Wastefulness
Self-Shame, Servility (low self-esteem) PROPER PRIDE ( high ambition) Arrogance, Vanity (bloated self-esteem)
Exploitative (covetous, dominator) JUSTICE (fair-mindedness) (Altruistic)
12 Virtue and Self-Control
- Aristotle contrasts
- Self-controlled or continent people, who have
unruly desires but manage to control them, guided
by good judgment (right reason). - Temperate people, whose reason and desires have
become harmonizedsecond-natureand choose that
which is good for them. - Weakness of will (akrasia) occurs when
right-thinking people cannot keep their desires
under control. (Discussed in Bk VII.)
13 Courage and Cowardice
- courage involves mastering fear
- courage willing to give your life for the good
you value - no freedom without courage
14 Temperance vs. Intemperance
- Temperate
- choose mean, willingly limit your pleasures
- enjoy temperance
- Self-indulgent
- E.g. drunkenness, promiscuity
- virtue freely act within limits
- vice enslaving
15 Justice and Fairness
- Virtues of Justice
- Obeying the Law
- Fairness willingly giving other his due
- 2 Forms of Justice
- Distributive
- Corrective
- 2 Norms of Justice
- Conventional
- Natural
16 Distributive vs. Corrective Justice
- Distributive giving or taking of goods or evils
fairly to others, i.e. according to
proportionality by merit/desert - what constitutes merit may vary with situation
call for judgment, esp. where participants are
unequal in their situation
- Corrective restoration of equality between
individuals where one has wrongfully injured the
other - here the differences in merit between the
individuals is irrelevant the superior has no
more right to harm the inferior than vice-versa
17 Conventional vs. Natural Justice
- Natural Right Justice according to the
laws/actions that fulfill human nature, relative
to wise judgment - These will reflect the ideal vision of a humanly
fulfilling society with a realistic appraisal of
what can best be attained at the time
- Conventional Right Justice according to law or
the prevailing norms of the society - These will be at least partly in conformity to
natural right, but may be distorted e.g. laws
under conditions of tyranny or oligarchy or
communism or other societies that do not value
genuine merit
18Sub-category of fairness honesty
- Virtue of Honesty
- Obeying the rules of the game
- Fairness willingly giving the other
(competitor) his due - Act of honesty
- Done consciously
- Choose for own sake
- Act of character
- Relation to other virtues
- PRIDE Self-respect, high-mindedness, integrity
- PRACTICAL WISDOM True v. false self-presentation
(vs. cleverness, self-deception) - FRIENDSHIP with self, others
- HAPPINESS in genuine accomplishment
NOTE honesty implies either (i) other-directed
sense of honor shame (pre-adult virtue) or (ii)
personal sense of honor principle (adult
virtue)
19 Virtues of the Mind
- Art e.g. sculptor, doctor
- Makes particular useful things
- They wouldnt otherwise exist
- Science e.g. chemist
- Deduces from necessary, universal laws
- Not concerned with particular things/events
- Intuitive Reason
- Realizes principles/facts are ultimate
- Recognizes principles in practical situations
- Practical Wisdom
- Deliberative skill re means
- Right values (ends)
- Self-knowledge
- Unity of Virtue
- Theoretical Wisdom
- Logic, Physics, Ethics
- Vision of God
20 Moral Knowledge is like
- Art (techne, craft)
- Goal-oriented
- Perception of, feel for the situation (nous)
- Brings about useful, noble particulars, which
otherwise dont exist - Grounded in desire, not cognition
- Truth-in-action more than in logos
- Science (episteme)
- Truth-revealing
- Awareness of universal principles, human nature
- Skill in deliberation and reasoning
- Involves knowledge of self, others
- Particulars exemplify universal values
21 Weakness of Will
- Socrates No one can know the good and not
choose it. - Common view People can know what they should
do, but still choose not to do it.
- PARADOX
- How can you choose to do what you know is not
good for you? Who knows? Who is choosing? - Compare how is self-deception possible?
22 Aristotles Solution
- One can have general
- knowledge but, moved by
- passion, not apply it.
- PARADOXES
- Chronic weak-willed do not choose
- Chronic weak-willed not one self
- SOLUTION
- vs. Socrates
- abstract knowledge is possible
- knowing is not doing.
- vs. Common sense
- Cannot know in situ and still choose bad
- voluntary doing is not choosing
- Person can lack moral self-unity
23 What is Self-Love?
- Is it good or bad?
- Self-love based on virtue is good
- We should love ourselves, be caretakers of our
virtue and well-being (compare Apology 30b) - Care of our psyche will involve care of our
works (theoretical and practical), but value
process/virtue over outcome/success
24 Art of Self-Care?
- Socratic theme
- Central value integrity
- Self-friendship preserving ethical balance in
midst of actions, emotions - Phronesis evaluates lifes opportunities with
- good reasoning
- right values (justice, noble beauty)
- concept of full life
25 True Self-Love
- Self-care, self-respect (proper pride)
- Having good goals (wisdom)
- Sticking to goals (courage, temperance)
- Acting to promote flourishing in yourself, others
- (justice, friendship)
26 Friendship (filia)
- Friendships of
- utility
- pleasure
- virtue
- Friendship bridges egoism / altruism
- True friendship
- based in self-love
- expands the self
27 Is Altruism Possible?
- ARISTOTLE
- Friendships most egoistic based on
pleasure/utility - Perfect friendship
- Based on virtue
- mutual recognition
- Non-competitive
- includes pleasure, utility
- Friend is other self
- Self is expanded self
- Friendship Egoism
- bridges gap between egoism and altruism
- Even self-sufficient virtuous person needs
friends
- Ethical egoism seek good for oneself.
- Altruism do good for another (for their sake)
- Counterexamples
- sacrifice for child, friend who betrays
- Still do it?
- Friendships alliances for mutual benefit or
emotional attachments (temporary? long-lasting?)
28 The Good Life and Politics
- subjective vs. objective good
- pleasure/joyfulness vs. happiness/flourishing
- 2 forms of the good life
- contemplative (theoria)
- Vision of God
- Perfect happiness
- active (praxis)
- Imperfect happiness
- Necessary good
29 Puzzle What is the Telos?
- Dominant End
- Goal activities aiming at ? truth or ? liberty
and justice - Life-actions are subordinated to one great goal
- Fulfillment in goal-achievement
- Inclusive End
- Goal inclusive balance of goods within a form
of life - Self e.g. politician, business, family life,
physical life - Performative balance in a good life
- Which is Aristotle?
30 Answers to Skeptics
- To Egoists and Immoralists why be moral?
- A No one can find peace and fulfillment without
a rational, friendly relation to others. - To Hedonists
- A virtues and even external goods are not good
b/c they are pleasurable, but are truly enjoyable
b/c they are good (conducive to rational
flourishing, fulfillment) - To Relativists
- A some individuals and some societies ethics
are more deeply fulfilling of human nature than
others (the fact people disagree does not mean
there is not a true answer to the question) - To Pluralists
- A some individuals lives are more fulfilling
than others (the life of the mind and the life of
politics are fully satisfying in ways that a life
of art, or a life of business and family are not
yet many contemporary Aristotelians reject this,
and the dominant end model of life)
31Aristotles Politics I
- rejects Republic as contrary to natural law
humans by nature desire/need - Family life
- Property of their own
- Share in governing themselves (except for
natural slaves)
32Aristotles Politics IIrule by
philosopher-kings impossible men need the rule
of law
- GOOD GOVTS
- Constitutional Monarchy
- Constitutional Aristocracy
- Constitutional Republic blends other forms
- BAD GOVTS
- Tyranny rule by fear (lawless)
- Oligarchy govt by the rich
- Democracy rule by working class (least bad)