aristotle (384-322 bce): first theorist of democracy phil 2011 semester i 2006-07

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Aristotle (384-322 BCE): First theorist of democracy PHIL 2011 Semester I 2006-07

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Page 1: Aristotle (384-322 BCE): First theorist of democracy PHIL 2011 Semester I 2006-07

Aristotle (384-322 BCE):First theorist of democracy

PHIL 2011

Semester I 2006-07

Page 2: Aristotle (384-322 BCE): First theorist of democracy PHIL 2011 Semester I 2006-07

Contributions

• Major political thinker;• First theorist of democracy (Plato hated

democracy);• Biologist; used scientific method to analyze

political institutions;• Database of 158 constitutions, all but one

lost: the Constitution of Athens• Developed logic (the ‘organon’, or tool).

Page 3: Aristotle (384-322 BCE): First theorist of democracy PHIL 2011 Semester I 2006-07

Aristotle

• 384 born in Stagira (in Macedonia)• Son of a court physician, Nicomachus; • 367-347 studied in Plato’s Academy, Athens• 347 Plato dies; Aristotle leaves Athens for Assos, Mytilene and

Macedonia;• In Asia Minor he studied marine organisms described in his

biological works• 342 tutored the Macedonian prince, Alexander; little discernible

influence• 335 returned to Athens;• Could not become an Athenian citizen b/c his parents were not

Athenian.

Page 4: Aristotle (384-322 BCE): First theorist of democracy PHIL 2011 Semester I 2006-07

Map of Ancient Greece

Page 5: Aristotle (384-322 BCE): First theorist of democracy PHIL 2011 Semester I 2006-07

Athens in Aristotle’s Day

• Greek city-state involved in commerce and trade, located by the sea (very important for economics and politics);

• Democracy; demos = people; cracy = rule, i.e. rule of the people• Ancient democracy very different from modern;• No concepts of rights (i.e. no liberal democracy)• Citizens had duties and obligations to their city:

– ‘We do not say that man who is not interested in politics is a man who minds his own business, we say that he has no business here at all’ (Pericles, in Thucydides, History of the Peloponnesian War)

• Approx. 1/3 of population slaves, born of slaves or captured in war;

• Foreigners (metics) and women could not become citizens.

Page 6: Aristotle (384-322 BCE): First theorist of democracy PHIL 2011 Semester I 2006-07

School of Athens by Raphael

Page 7: Aristotle (384-322 BCE): First theorist of democracy PHIL 2011 Semester I 2006-07

Relationship to Plato

PlatoSoul-Society Analogy• soul: 3 pts: reason, spirit,

appetite• Society: rulers, guardians,

people• Method; determine the Form of

the Good;Absolutist: the philosopher-king

should rule the city;No democracy!.

• Aristotle• Soul-Society Analogy• Soul: 2 pts: reason and appetite• Society: rulers and ruled (all

citizens)• Method: empirical: examine

phenomena & opinion• Relativist: different regimes for

different cities• Democracy not best, but best of

worst regimes.

Page 8: Aristotle (384-322 BCE): First theorist of democracy PHIL 2011 Semester I 2006-07

Happiness

• Greeks debated: what is good life, or what is happiness? • Man on the street’s answer: wealth, fame, beauty.• But what is man? What is his function (goal/telos), I.e.

what is natural for him?• Key premise: man has reason, and his telos (final end) is

to use that reason;• Happiness is an activity of the soul (the reasoning part of

our being) in accordance with virtue (Nicomachean Ethics).

• Even contemplation, the highest life for man, is an activity (Pol. 7.3).

Page 9: Aristotle (384-322 BCE): First theorist of democracy PHIL 2011 Semester I 2006-07

Aristotle’s Biology

• Biology informs Aristotle’s view of human happiness, the good life and telos;

• Major idea: teleology (study of purpose); we understand things by their purpose or end;

• Telos = goal or end; the end of an acorn is to become an oak; that is natural for acorns.

• This can be done for man and society as well as organisms, i.e. what is the final end of man?

Page 10: Aristotle (384-322 BCE): First theorist of democracy PHIL 2011 Semester I 2006-07

Aristotle the biologist

• Major Works in Zoology:– Parts of Animals– History of Animals– Movements of Animals

• Recall that Aristotle’s father was a physician;

• Aristotle studied marine organisms and other animals!

Page 11: Aristotle (384-322 BCE): First theorist of democracy PHIL 2011 Semester I 2006-07

Aristotle’s Hierarchy of Beings

• 3 kinds of soul:– Vegetative: plants– Sensitive: animals– Rational: man

These ideas still used in the 17th century by Descartes.

What is unique to man is reasoning ability and his highest good/goal/telos is to exercise that ability.

Plants and animals have different goals than man because they have different natures/souls.

Page 12: Aristotle (384-322 BCE): First theorist of democracy PHIL 2011 Semester I 2006-07

Virtue

• Everything has a virtue• Virtue means acting well, in accordance

with one’s nature;• Slaves, plants, animals, humans all have

virtues, just as they have goods;• Man’s particular virtue to act from reason,

and unless he is a philosopher, to act for his community.

Page 13: Aristotle (384-322 BCE): First theorist of democracy PHIL 2011 Semester I 2006-07

Aristotle’s Political Thought

Father of political science: his Lyceum, a rival to Plato’s Academy, launched first scientific study of politics;

Political science is the master science as it directs all the others, e.g. music, mathematics and gymnastic;

Database: constitutions of 158 Greek cities (all lost) except for:

• Constitution of Athens: political history and description of contemporary constitution;

• Aristotle classifies regimes according to which interests are dominant (the rich, the poor, the middle class);

• Analyzes diseases of political regimes, by looking at parts of regimes and their variations, by analogy to biology (1290b24).

Page 14: Aristotle (384-322 BCE): First theorist of democracy PHIL 2011 Semester I 2006-07

Major Political Ideas of Aristotle

Philosophical inquiry should examine the Good, the highest life for man

• What is the telos or purpose of man? He “is by nature a political animal.”

• The Polis (city-state) provides the highest life for man, by enabling him to fulfill his purpose.

• Another end for man is the life of contemplation (i.e. philosophy) because man is the reasoning animal;

• Philosophy is a kind of activity, and hence not passive.

Page 15: Aristotle (384-322 BCE): First theorist of democracy PHIL 2011 Semester I 2006-07

Major Political Ideas, cont.

• The best regime promotes the good of all, not just of one class, group or section of the population.

• A city is not a mere alliance for defense or a trading association; it has a higher purpose or end;

• Hierarchy is natural (Pol., Bk I).• Plato’s advocacy of communism is misguided (Pol.,

Bk II); private property is best, but not too much, and not from trade (agricultural economy is best).

• Limits on property, population and economic activity are desirable.

Page 16: Aristotle (384-322 BCE): First theorist of democracy PHIL 2011 Semester I 2006-07

Aristotle’s Ideal City

• Describes the necessary natural resources, planning, economic and religious activities, community life;

• Stipulates right conditions for marriage and procreation;• Separates economic from political activity;• Analyzes the purpose of the state, does not simply take it

as a given;• Stipulates that education is for good of city so it should be

a common (not private) endeavour;• Stipulates the best kind of music for citizens to hear.

• .

Page 17: Aristotle (384-322 BCE): First theorist of democracy PHIL 2011 Semester I 2006-07

Important Quotes

• “…man is by nature a political animal” (emph. added; Pol. I.2)

• “He who would inquire into the essence and attributes of various kinds of government must first of all determine what a state is” (Pol. III.1).

• “…the identity of a city is not constituted by its walls” (Pol. III.3).