Essay About Aristotle

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    Aquinas sought to use the same writings and thoughts to further his agenda for making clear his thoughts. Aristotle based his arguments on the goodness of man. He noted that the man has to develop from within an aspect of being admired based on the characters that are not as controversial. In essence, he meant that it is critical for people to leave a life that

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    ethics were described by Greek philosopher Aristotle. He had an excellent command on various subjects ranging from sciences to mathematics and philosophy. He was also a student of a famous philosopher. His most important study on ethics, personal morality and virtues is ‘The Nicomachean Ethics’, which has been greatly influencing works of literature in ethics and heavily read for centuries, is believed to be

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    perhaps the most famous of them would be Aristotle. Aristotle was a Greek philosopher who contributed to many different sciences including, logic, metaphysics, mathematics, biology, and countless others. Although Aristotle is famous now, he wasn’t very famous in his own time. Aristotle’s beliefs contradicted many of the modern beliefs in his time. Ben Waggoner, a professor at the University of California Museum of Paleontology, states, “Where Aristotle differed most sharply from medieval and modern

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    In this section of Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics, Aristotle gives his ideas on voluntary, involuntary and not voluntary actions, when one should praise or blame someone, and does ignorance justify wrongful doings. Aristotle believed that in order for someone to be praised or blamed, an individual must do actions voluntarily. If the action is completed involuntarily, persons can no longer be subject to praise or blame, but rather to pity and pardon. Doing things voluntarily, are conscious actions

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    flourishing” (Blakley, Christopher). Aristotle and David Hume developed accounts of ethics that remained true to their own empirical philosophies; both of which stray away from the more traditional accounts. Their opposing theories contain the overall theme of how a virtuous person would live their life. In contrast, David Hue developed his own account of sentimentalist virtue ethics that challenges, or pushes back on, the virtue ethics Aristotle. According to Aristotle, we should be virtuous people,

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    For example, the ball flies in the air because someone kicked it. Aristotle says that this eternal movement and change had to have started off with an unmoved mover, or Prime Mover. This is something that is a mover but does not move itself. According to the laws of physics, one cannot simply move something without moving itself, meaning that this Prime Mover is not the Efficient Cause of eternal movement. This is where Aristotle

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    Aristotle’s virtue ethics gives us perspectives on harm reduction from an individualistic point of view. Aristotle defines good in terms of something we aim at and is related to the function one performs in a community. Society, for Aristotle is a conglomeration of citizens with good character, where each one performs the specific function assigned to him in the best possible manner. (Macintyre 2002: 52; Aristotle Politics Book II) Virtue ethics, unlike utilitarianism is not concerned with specific actions

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    Nicomachean Ethics is a famous text by Aristotle where he talks about various aspects about ethics. Aristotle argues that most people agree that the supreme good is happiness. He believes that happiness is something that all humans try to aim for. What people disagree with is what it actually is that makes people happy and what it is that constitutes happiness. Aristotle defines happiness as a self-fulfillment. To Aristotle, happiness is when someone completes or accomplishes their purpose in

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    A teaching that Plutarch says Alexander shall credited Aristotle, was when Alexander was in Phaselis, a Phoenician city not submitting to his rule, noticed a statue of Theodectas, a deceased citizen of Phaselis. He led a band of Macedonians to the statue and crowned it with garlands, showing no ungraceful honor

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    ideal community of intellects from the classical world. In the center of the painting, Plato and Aristotle are discussing the theories of Idealism vs. Realism. Plato’s hand is raised upwards, indicating that the eternal forms, such as beauty, goodness, and truth are not of this world. He says that they are not of this world, instead they are included in a timeless realm of pure ideas. Aristotle on the other hand, points his right hand straight ahead into the solid world of material reality and

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