Download Aristotle Discussion Questions

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
HUEN 3100
Fredricksmeyer
Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics
Discussion Questions
Please prepare to answer the following questions and discuss Aristotle’s Nicomachean
Ethics, Books 1.1-103 and 2.104-275. As you prepare, make sure to write down the line
numbers where you find your answers. All questions and answers refer to the views of
Aristotle (i.e., every question and answer implies the statement “according to Aristotle”),
unless specified otherwise.
1. Suppose that I ask you the question about anything you want “Why do you want this?”
and I continue to ask that question and you continue to answer. For exampleQ: Why do you want money?
A: In order to do travel.
Q: Okay, why do you want to travel?
A: In order to see new people and places.
And so on ….
At what ultimate answer will you always arrive? Or, to put the question differently, what
does he say is the ultimate goal of all intelligent activity? Also, what do you think
Aristotle means here by “intelligent”?
2. What function is unique to man (i.e., not shared by animals)?
3. If we perform this function (i.e., the one that you just identified) well, then we are good at
being what?
4. Note that at 1.44 Aristotle equates being-good-at-being-human with virtue.
And, since he has equated being-good-at-being-human with rational activity, we now
have the equation “rational activity = virtue.”
Note further that this equation is the first statement in an implied syllogism. A syllogism
is a logical proposition in which a third statement necessarily follows from two preceding
ones. In short, if A = B, and if B = C, then A = C. The most famous example is: “If
Socrates is a man, and if all men are mortal, then Socrates is mortal.
The second premise of the implied syllogism comes at Book 1.49. Namely, Aristotle
says (in reverse order): virtue (or specifically virtuous activity) = happiness. What, then,
is the third part of the implied syllogism that Aristotle omits, if we accept that the first
two statements read as follows?
If rational activity = virtue,
And if virtue = happiness,
Then ____________ = ______________.
If Aristotle’s reasoning here seems incomplete, convoluted, or unclear, note that at 1.4648 he effectively warns us against expecting logical precision in his current discussion.
Can you identify any earlier lines in Book 1 where he does the same?
5. Does Aristotle value contemplation of virtue as highly as virtuous activity?
6. What can undermine happiness, even if a person practices rational activity?
7. By what means can we nevertheless be permanently happy, or at least not wholly
miserable?
8. At 1.95-103 Aristotle discusses the “appetitive part of the soul,” as one division of the
soul’s irrational side. What aspect of the human mind according to Freud do you think
this appetitive part of the soul most closely parallels? Please explain. In the same
passage Aristotle discusses “the rational part” of the soul, against which the appetitive
part resists and instead urges a person towards the fulfillment of desires. What aspect of
the human mind according to Freud do you think this “rational part” of the soul most
closely parallels? Please explain.
9. Aristotle identifies two types of virtue at 2.104. What are they, and how is each
achieved?
10. At 2.129-45, Aristotle provides (what scholars refer to as) the doctrine of the ethical
mean by which we can determine the moral virtues that we should habitually exercise.
(Note that there is the larger moral virtue of rational action, and the innumerable, smaller
virtues, some of which are moral in nature, such as bravery, and some of which are not,
such as a proper diet.) Please explain this doctrine using bravery as your ethical mean.
What are the two qualities of which it is a mean? Which of these qualities is
characterized by defect and which by excess? What does Aristotle say about the relation
of pain and pleasure to these qualities?
11. Can we perform virtuous acts without ourselves being virtuous (and thus without making
ourselves happier than we were before)? Please explain your answer with a concrete
example.
12. Is the mean always the same for everyone? Please explain using as a mean “the proper
amount of food.”
13. From which extreme should we first depart in order to achieve a mean, the extreme closer
to or further from the mean? Does this extreme typically involve pain or pleasure? Please
provide a concrete example.
14. Please choose a single word to identify the quality or state of mind you think Aristotle
wants us to achieve by reading Books 1.1-103 and 2.104-275 of the Nicomachean Ethics.
15. Can you think of a virtue (big or small) that does not represent a mean between two
extremes? Explain.
16. Does Aristotle’s theory of the ethical mean strike you as practical (i.e., something you
could apply in your own life) or impractical? Explain.