aristotle – Flashcards

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Aristotle (384 BCE - 322 BCE)
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The Main Idea: man's good consists in happiness, understood as a life of intellectual and moral excellence
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1. What is the point of departure for Aristotle's ethical view?
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The idea that every activity, whether intellectual or physical, has a purpose, and the achievement of that purpose is the activity's good.
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2. What is the name for the kind of ethical orientation of which Aristotle's is the outstanding example?
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A teleological orientation (from the Greek word telos, meaning end, object, or purpose): such ethical views conceive good in terms of the ends of an action, and conduct is evaluated in terms of the conduct's realizing its purpose.
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3. In considering ethical issues, should we expect a degree of precision in our answers that is comparable to the precision of mathematics?
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No - in our investigation of the good we are not to expect more precision than the subject admits. "Precision is not to be sought for alike in all discussions, any more than in all the products in the crafts." - Aristotle
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4. Does Aristotle think that there is an end or purpose to human life? If so, what is it?
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According to Aristotle, there is an end or purpose to human life, and it is happiness.
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5. In terms of the kinds of ethical projects discussed in class - applied ethics, normative ethics, meta-ethics, self-regarding ethics - where is Aristotle to be placed? Why?
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Self-regarding ethics, because his fundamental concern is with the question of what kind of life is a good life
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6. According to Aristotle, in what does man's uniqueness consist? What is man's special excellence?
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His capacity to reason, and therefore man's good, his fulfillment, consists in the exercise of reason.
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7. Does Aristotle think that material factors like money, friends, and political power are irrelevant to human happiness?
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No - Aristotle thinks that material circumstances are highly relevant to leading a happy life. He mentions among other factors the importance of money, friends, political power, even a decent level of physical attractiveness (although he says nothing about other-worldly considerations like the love of God). "It is impossible, or not easy, to do noble acts without the proper equipment." - Aristotle
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8. What is happiness (eudaimonia) for Aristotle? Is it an objective or a subjective phenomenon?
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By "happiness" Aristotle means a life of excellence or fulfillment, doing the distinctively human things well, not a life of feeling a certain way. As any hammer is a good hammer if it does the hammer things well - their purpose is common and objective - so with persons: a person is fulfilled - happy in Aristotle's sense - if he or she does the human things well. Happiness, for Aristotle, in an objective phenomenon, not one that varies from person to person.
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9. What two kinds of virtue (or human excellence) does Aristotle identify?
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First, intellectual virtue, by which he means philosophical wisdom or understanding Second, moral virtue, by which he means developing and possessing a good character, having practical wisdom about what to do, how to do it, and when to refrain from doing it
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10. By what method are we to discover the moral virtues, according Aristotle?
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By exercising our distinctively human capacity for reason to discover where, between the pitfalls of excess and deficiency, the virtues lie (in the "Golden Mean"), and working out a plan of action that takes into account who we are individually, what possibilities are available to us, and other relevant factors in order to achieve those virtues, or excellences of character. The method is for me to use my reason to determine where I am now, where I want to go, and by what path I am to get to the place that I want to be.
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11. Does every action have a mean?
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No - some actions are inherently bad and always to be avoided. "Not every action...admits of a mean; for some have names that already imply badness, e.g., spite shamelessness, envy, ... adultery, theft, and murder; for all of these and suchlike things imply by their names that they are themselves bad, and not the excesses or deficiencies of them." - Aristotle
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12. Between intellectual and moral virtue, which does Aristotle rank higher?
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Intellectual virtue - "the activity of philosophic wisdom is admittedly the pleasantest of virtuous activities; at all events the pursuit of it is thought to offer pleasures marvelous for their purity and their enduringness and it is to be expected that those who know will pass their time more pleasantly than those who inquire." - Aristotle
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