Aristotle on the sources of the ethical life

Bibliographic Information

Aristotle on the sources of the ethical life

Sylvia Berryman

(Oxford Aristotle studies / general editors, Julia Annas and Lindsay Judson)

Oxford University Press, 2019

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [193]-209) and indexes

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Aristotle on the Sources of the Ethical Life challenges the common belief that Aristotle's ethics is founded on an appeal to human nature, an appeal that is thought to be intended to provide both substantive ethical advice and justification for the demands of ethics. Sylvia Berryman argues that this is not Aristotle's intent, while resisting the view that Aristotle was blind to questions of the source or justification of his ethical views. She interprets Aristotle's views as a 'middle way' between the metaphysical grounding offered by Platonists, and the scepticism or subjectivist alternatives articulated by others. The commitments implicit in the nature of action figure prominently in this account: Aristotle reinterprets Socrates' famous paradox that no-one does evil willingly, taking it to mean that a commitment to pursuing the good is implicit in the very nature of action.

Table of Contents

1: Introduction 2: Aristotle in the Ethics Wars 3: Nature and the Sources of Normativity 4: Is Aristotle an Archimedean Naturalist? 5: Naturalism in Aristotle's Politics 6: The Case against a Naturalist Reading 7: Aristotle's Metaethics 8: Socratic Bootstrapping Coda. Aristotle and the Practical Turn Bibliography Index Locurum

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