Book 2 Aristotle
Book 2 Aristotle
Book 2 Aristotle
2. Give me an example of a behavior (good or had) that you have changed/developed by habituation. Now give an example of a behavior that you would LIKE TO CHANGE by habituation.
A behavior that I have developed by habituation is daily exercise, as I have made it part of my daily routine over the past 3 years. I would like to change my singing habits with respect to vocal support and by habitually keeping my ribcage expanded outwards while producing sound as practiced everytime I sing.
4. Aristotle begins by giving a good rule of thumb (one that he will examine more closely further on in the book): that certain states in the soul "tend to be ruined by _defect and __excess." (1104a13) >
5. If these ruin the soul, what preserves it? (1104a13-1104b3) Courage, as it helps mediate between defect and excess.
6. Thus ethics is concerned with developing the right sorts of _actions and passions. (1104b15) --(or pleasures and pains)-7. Now give me three examples of each of the following (a) activities that we should develop pain toward and (b) activities that it would be good to develop pleasure toward: a) Activities we should develop pain toward: the base, the injurious, the painful b) Activities we should develop pleasure toward: the noble, the advantageous, the pleasant Finish read this chapter before going on to the next. Aristotle here raises a radical view of ethics: Ethics is not just doing good but making yourself into a good person. But why is this radical? Because according to this theory we are not truly good if we do a good deed out of duty, obedience to God, or out of guilt, since in these cases our actions are accompanied by pain. For Aristotle doing a good deed should be accompanied by pleasure. Thus it is not the action that is most important but developing the sort of character where you enjoy doing what is good and proper. 7. Is this a reasonable theory? What would Aristotle say about a person who refrains from a crime out of fear of hell or divine wrath?" Are they really good?
This is a reasonable theory because it provides that those who are good are those who have become habituated to enjoy doing good deeds. Aristotle would have said this person is not really good as they avoid these behaviors to avoid unfavorable circumstances, not because it is a part of their character to behave honorably.
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This is like the problem of the chicken and the egg because Aristotle suggests that a man who engaes in the most virtuous of human actions are those that are predisposed to do so and that the man who chooses to behave virtuously and he that does so for the sake of being virtuous are actually the least virtuous. Thus, a man cannot be genuinely temperate or perform good deeds without first being dispositonally virtuous by this definition.
In pleasures and pain Mean state: temperence Deficient state: insensible people
In giving and taking money Mean state: liberally Deficient state: prodigiality (in taking) and meanness (in spending) Excessive State: prodigality (in spending) and meanness (exceeds in taking)
In honor and dishonor Mean state: proper pride Deficient state: undue humility Excessive State: ambitiousness
In handling large sums of money: Mean state: magnifiencence Deficient state: niggardliness Excessive State: tastelessness and vulgarity
In small honors Mean state: related to magnifence Deficient state: undue humility Excessive State: ambitiousness
In social life
Mean state: good temper Deficient state: inirascibility Excessive State: irascibility
In truth telling and pride Mean state: Deficient state: Excessive State:
In the pleasure of amusements Mean state: praise-worthy Deficient state: neither praiseworthy nor right, but worthy of blame Excessive State: neither praiseworthy nor right, but worthy of blame
In pleasantness toward friends and associates Mean state: ready-wit Deficient state: boorishness Excessive State: buffoonery
In level of shame Mean state: modesty Deficient state: bashfulness Excessive State: shamelessness
In pleasure and pain at what befalls neighbors Mean state: righteous indignation Deficient state: envious Excessive State: painful