Title: ARISTOTLE: Background
1ARISTOTLE Background
- PLATO The forms patterns or ideals are not
this world and can only be known through a
process of education - Thus morality is based on the highest knowledge
available only to a few. - ARISTOTLE The forms or patterns that enable
us to understand objects dont exist apart from
particular objects. - Thus morality is not based on a "good"
independent of experience, but on experience
itself.
2ARISTOTLE What He Asks
- Aristotle asks What do people desire? He says
we desire an end that is self-sufficient, final,
attainable - According to Aristotle this end can only be
HAPPINESS. - And happiness can only be explained in terms of
our capacity for reason.
3How ARISTOTLE Classifies Knowledge Human
Activities
- Theoretical Sciences -- include Metaphysics,
Physics and Mathematics - Productive /Practical Sciences -- are those where
reason serves human beings. - Productive Sciences -- involve "know-how" and
cover many crafts, including art. - Practical Science or ETHICS -- Here humans are
AGENTS rather than producers. - The "end" of the Practical Science is not a
product, but the living of a certain kind of
life.
4Aristotles Starting Assumptions
- Every activity has its proper end at which it
aims. "end in itself" - Politics is the "master art" -- why? Who should
practice it? Contemporary relevance? - Different Sciences" will have different levels
of precision. - Ethics, dealing with opinions, will not have the
same kind of precision as mathematics. - The best judge of the appropriate precision is a
person educated in that subject.
5Happiness is the aim of Human Existence
- Aristotle thought that there was agreement among
people that the ultimate human good is happiness. - Why? what is Aristotle assuming about human
interests? - It is FINAL is that for which everything else is
done - It is SELF-SUFFICIENT by itself it makes life
desirable - It is ACHIEVABLE BY ACTION attainable
6Aristotles Definition of Happiness
- The "function of man" is an activity of the soul
that follows a rational principle. - Aristotles definition relies on his analysis of
the soul and the Greek definition of virtue - VIRTUE is the appropriate excellence for an
activity -- What that activity aims at. virtue
being good at ____ for the Greeks - Thus HAPPINESS as the goal or "excellence" of
human life is "activity of the soul in accord
with virtue"
7Reason, the Human Soul and Virtue
- The human soul has two elements.
- Rational grasps a rule or principle
- Irrational
- The rational part has two functions
- The exercise of reason for its own sake.
- The control of the irrational part
- 2 kinds of virtue parallel the functions of
reason. - Intellectual Virtues consist of instruction
knowledge - the "virtues of intellect" - Moral Virtues consist of practical actions
habits of choice. - the "virtues of character"
8Aristotle argues that Virtue is a State of
Character involving the "Mean"
- According to Aristotle the human personality has
three elements - Passions
- Faculties
- States of character.
- The passions and faculties abilities are not
blameworthy or praiseworthy in themselves - Thus Virtue must be a state of character.
- Virtue makes a man good
- Virtue makes him do his own work well.
9Aristotle argues that Virtue is a State of
Character involving the "Mean"
- Every activity has an excess and a defect.
- The master of an art avoids the extremes
- BUT the "mean" or balance is relative to each of
us - In summary virtue is a state of character, lying
in a mean relative to us, which is determined by
a rational principle.
10Examples of Virtues and the "Mean"
- Excess Mean Defect
- rashness courage
cowardliness - vanity proper pride undue
humility - self-indulgence temperance 'insensible'
11The Two Kinds of Intellectual Virtue
- Practical Wisdom deals with variable things.
Here the reasoning must be true and the desire
right if the choice is to be good - Philosophical Wisdom deals with invariable
things Contemplative in nature. Not practical
nor productive. - The origin of Moral Action is in CHOICE.
- Choice cannot exist without reason or intellect,
or without a moral state of character. - Good action cannot exist without intellect and
character.
12Aristotle believes that Philosophic Wisdom is
superior because
- The activity of reason offers pleasures that are
- Pure and enduring
- Self-sufficient.
- Are leisurely.
- ..
- Question Is this a life that humans can aspire
to?
13The Ethics of Character
- The example of Le Chambon
- Their goodness is not Kantian or utilitarian. It
came from the kind of people they were. - For Aristotle the question isnt How should I
act?, but What kind of a person should I be? - This is a focus on CHARACTER rather than ACTION
- Aristotle argues that in ethics we need good
PERSONS as well as good ACTIONS
14The Clash between Duty Inclination
- We can understand Aristotle as an attempt to
reconcile duty inclination/reason emotion - This is unlike Kant where the divide between
reason emotion is a key element of his ethical
theory. - Aristotle makes a distinction between a temperate
a continent person. - The temperate person does what is right because
they WANT to from the heart - The continent person does what is right, but
doesnt necessarily want to. from the head
15Kant Utilitarianism
- Both Kants ethics and Utilitarianism maintain
the split between head heart. - For KANT
- The moral person is close to the continent
person. - UTILITARIANISM
- Motives arent a factor in the hedonic
calculus. - And everyones emotions count equally.
- If anything OUR emotions are given less weight.
16TEXT The Structure of Virtues I
- According to Aristotle virtue is
- a habit or disposition of the soul not inborn,
but acquired - involving both feeling and action not only
action, but certain kinds of feelings - to seek the mean in all things relative to us
- where the mean is defined through reason as the
prudent man would define it. this reflects the
need for both principles and persons
17TEXT Aristotle on Virtue II
- In Aristotles discussion of virtue the
emphasis is on CHARACTER as a result of habits
of behavior and perception, rather than
individual actions - He asks what life with or without a certain
virtues mean, excess or defect would be like?
18Two Virtues Courage Compassion
- COURAGE A lack of courage can interfere with
reaching our goals. - Courage rests on rightly ordering our fears
an accurate assessment of risk as well as proper
confidence.
19Two Virtues Courage Compassion
- COMPASSION Compassion is part of recognizing the
suffering of others as suffering. - Compassion always involves the desire to do
something. whether possible or not - Compassion involves moral imagination
- Compassion takes us beyond the rules.
- Yet we still need good judgment.
- Compassion implies moral equality/pity implies
inequality.
20The Virtue of Self-Love
- Love, whether of self or other, wants to see the
object of the love flourish. - Self-love involves both feelings and behaving/
acting towards ourselves in certain ways as well
as self-knowledge - Love is not unconditionally positive -- it
involves doing what you need to do to flourish. - The excess arrogance, conceit etc. and
deficiency self-deprecation, self-effacing etc
interfere with your flourishing. - Proper self-love is very important in friendship.
21How does Practical Wisdom work?
- Practical Wisdom involves the reflective and
affective application of a general disposition to
right action of some kind. huh? - Translation A particular virtue that is part
of your moral character and your conception of
the good life come together in a certain
situation guiding you to form a judgment
practical wisdom about what you should do.
22In Closing
- Aristotle says you cant have one virtue without
the others - there is a reciprocity. - This is because virtues are connected both with
practical wisdom and with human flourishing. - Finally An ethics of character helps other
moral theories apply rules sensitively and,
through practical wisdom, is able to balance the
competing claims of utility rights etc.