PHIL 161; Fall 2015 Greek Ethics David O. Brink Handout #9: Happiness and Virtue in Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics

Similar documents
PHIL 202; Fall 2011 Greek Ethics David O. Brink Handout #10: Happiness and Virtue in Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics

Nichomachean Ethics. Philosophy 21 Fall, 2004 G. J. Mattey

Phil Aristotle. Instructor: Jason Sheley

Aristotle s Virtue Ethics

Practical Wisdom and Politics

- 1 - Outline of NICOMACHEAN ETHICS, Book I Book I--Dialectical discussion leading to Aristotle's definition of happiness: activity in accordance

PHI 1700: Global Ethics

Choosing Rationally and Choosing Correctly *

Utilitarianism: For and Against (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1973), pp Reprinted in Moral Luck (CUP, 1981).

5AANB002 Greek Philosophy II: Aristotle Syllabus Academic year 2016/17

Moral Argumentation from a Rhetorical Point of View

Nicomachean Ethics. by Aristotle ( B.C.)

Each copy of any part of a JSTOR transmission must contain the same copyright notice that appears on the screen or printed page of such transmission.

Moral requirements are still not rational requirements

What Part of the Soul Does Justice Perfect? Shane Drefcinski Department of Humanities/Philosophy University of Wisconsin Platteville

Aristotle s Ethics Philosophy 207z Fall 2013

NICOMACHEAN ETHICS (BOOKS VIII IX)

EUDAIMONISM AND COSMOPOLITAN CONCERN 1

Reading the Nichomachean Ethics

Virtuous act, virtuous dispositions

7AAN2027 Greek Philosophy II: Aristotle Syllabus Academic year 2015/16

Korsgaard and Non-Sentient Life ABSTRACT

Virtue Ethics. What kind of person do you want to grow up to be? Virtue Ethics (VE): The Basic Idea

Introduction CHAPTER ONE

Philosophers in Jesuit Education Eastern APA Meetings, December 2011 Discussion Starter. Karen Stohr Georgetown University

Moral Luck, Poor Upbringing, and the Virtue of Indomitability in Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics

Unifying the Categorical Imperative* Marcus Arvan University of Tampa

7AAN2027 Greek Philosophy II: Aristotle Syllabus Academic year 2013/4

Aristotle s Doctrine of the Mean and the Circularity of Human Nature

Plato s Protagoras Virtue & Expertise. Plato s Protagoras The Unity of the Virtues

Two Kinds of Ends in Themselves in Kant s Moral Theory

Take Home Exam #2. PHI 1700: Global Ethics Prof. Lauren R. Alpert

PHIL 202: IV:

LODGE VEGAS # 32 ON EDUCATION

PHILOSOPHY 490/500 A02 ARISTOTLE S ETHICS AND AFTER. Department of Philosophy University of Victoria

PROSPECTS FOR A JAMESIAN EXPRESSIVISM 1 JEFF KASSER

7AAN2027 Greek Philosophy II: Aristotle Syllabus Academic year 2012/3

Comments on Nicholas Gier s Aristotle, Confucius, and Practical Reason

Egocentric Rationality

Skepticism and Internalism

Selections of the Nicomachean Ethics for GGL Unit: Learning to Live Well Taken from classic.mit.edu archive. Translated by W.D. Ross I.

KNOWLEDGE ON AFFECTIVE TRUST. Arnon Keren

From the Categorical Imperative to the Moral Law

Shieva Kleinschmidt [This is a draft I completed while at Rutgers. Please do not cite without permission.] Conditional Desires.

SUMMARIES AND TEST QUESTIONS UNIT 6

Aquinas on Spiritual Change. In "Is an Aristotelian Philosophy of Mind Still Credible? (A draft)," Myles

Review of Thomas C. Brickhouse and Nicholas D. Smith, "Socratic Moral Psychology"

Philosophy Conference University of Patras, Philosophy Department 4-5 June, 2015

Socratic and Platonic Ethics

Does the Third Man Argument refute the theory of forms?

Has Nagel uncovered a form of idealism?

Kant s Fundamental Principles of the Metaphysic of Morals

Chapter Six. Aristotle s Theory of Causation and the Ideas of Potentiality and Actuality

Practical Rationality and Ethics. Basic Terms and Positions

Aristotle's Method for Determining the Nature of Happiness

A primer of major ethical theories

Summary of Kant s Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals

What Lurks Beneath the Integrity Objection. Bernard Williams s alienation and integrity arguments against consequentialism have

Other Recommended Books (on reserve at library):

Adapted from The Academic Essay: A Brief Anatomy, for the Writing Center at Harvard University by Gordon Harvey. Counter-Argument

Happiness and Moral Virtue Aristotle

Reason Papers Vol. 36, no. 1

Commitment and Temporal Mediation in Korsgaard's Self-Constitution

Testimony and Moral Understanding Anthony T. Flood, Ph.D. Introduction

BELIEF POLICIES, by Paul Helm. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, Pp. xiii and 226. $54.95 (Cloth).

Virtue Ethics. A Basic Introductory Essay, by Dr. Garrett. Latest minor modification November 28, 2005

Honors Ethics Oral Presentations: Instructions

Agency and Responsibility. According to Christine Korsgaard, Kantian hypothetical and categorical imperative

Reasons With Rationalism After All MICHAEL SMITH

Aristotle on well-being

A solution to the problem of hijacked experience

Introduction to Ethics Part 2: History of Ethics. SMSU Spring 2005 Professor Douglas F. Olena

the notion of modal personhood. I begin with a challenge to Kagan s assumptions about the metaphysics of identity and modality.

Nicomachean Ethics by Aristotle (ca 330 BC) (Selections from Books I, II & X)

Rationality in Action. By John Searle. Cambridge: MIT Press, pages, ISBN Hardback $35.00.

Self-Evidence and A Priori Moral Knowledge

EXTERNALISM AND THE CONTENT OF MORAL MOTIVATION

Terence Irwin, University of Oxford DRAFT, NOT FOR PUBLICATION. Do not cite, quote, copy, or circulate without permission.

GS SCORE ETHICS - A - Z. Notes

Thomas Aquinas. Summa Theologiae la Translated, with Introduction and Commentary, by. Robert Pasnau

We have a strong intuition that considerations of moral rightness or

Many Faces of Virtue. University of Toronto. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research

Sidgwick on Practical Reason

Kant The Grounding of the Metaphysics of Morals (excerpts) 1 PHIL101 Prof. Oakes. Section IV: What is it worth? Reading IV.2.

Immortality Cynicism

KANTIAN ETHICS (Dan Gaskill)

The Kant vs. Hume debate in Contemporary Ethics : A Different Perspective. Amy Wang Junior Paper Advisor : Hans Lottenbach due Wednesday,1/5/00

Practical Wisdom & The Unity of Virtue in Nicomachean Ethics VI.12-13

PLEASESURE, DESIRE AND OPPOSITENESS

Philosophical Review.

Realism and instrumentalism

In essence, Swinburne's argument is as follows:

Plato s Defense of Justice in the Republic. Rachel G.K. Singpurwalla

Well-Being, Time, and Dementia. Jennifer Hawkins. University of Toronto

The view that all of our actions are done in self-interest is called psychological egoism.

Are There Reasons to Be Rational?

WHY IS GOD GOOD? EUTYPHRO, TIMAEUS AND THE DIVINE COMMAND THEORY

QUESTION 47. The Diversity among Things in General

FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES OF THE METAPHYSIC OF MORALS. by Immanuel Kant

From: Michael Huemer, Ethical Intuitionism (2005)

Transcription:

Draft of 10-4- 15 PHIL 161; Fall 2015 Greek Ethics David O. Brink Handout #9: Happiness and Virtue in Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics Though three works on ethics are often attributed to Aristotle - - the Nicomachean Ethics (NE), Eudemian Ethics (EE), and the Magna Moralia (MM) - - the NE appears to be the most comprehensive and mature, as well as the most clearly authentic of the works. 1 We shall focus on the NE, for the most part, relying on the EE and MM only when they shed light on issues in the NE. As NE book I makes clear, Aristotle shares the eudaimonism of his predecessors; his conception of ethics is based upon a conception of what sort of life will secure the agent's own eudaimonia or happiness. Like Socrates and Plato, Aristotle believes that virtue (arete) is a state of character whose exercise promotes the agent's happiness. THE FINAL GOOD Aristotle initially describes his inquiry as a form of political science: all sciences, actions, decisions aim at some good; political science is a superordinate science that aims at the final good for an individual or, better still, for a city (1094a1-3, 1094b5-8). Most of the NE is concerned with the nature of the final good for an individual, although, this good involves the good of others as well. Why a final good? He begins the NE by arguing that... every action and decision seems to aim at some good; hence the good has been well described as that at which everything aims [1094a2-3]. However, it doesn't seem to follow from the fact that we always aim at a good that there is one good at which we always aim. We might have a number of distinct ultimate aims. Understood as a straightforward psychological claim, eudaimonism may seem somewhat dubious. But we should notice two things. First, Aristotle insists that our ultimate aim can be a complex whole whose parts we desire both for their own sakes and for their role in a good life (1097a31- b6; see below). If so, psychological eudaimonism need not assume all our desires are instrumental to some unitary end. We can recognize a number of distinct things as intrinsically valuable. Second, Aristotle's initial concern is normative, not simply descriptive. He thinks that a rational person will impose structure on the goods she seeks. On these points we must first notice that everyone who is capable of living in accordance with his own decision sets up some goal of living finely - - either honor or reputation or wealth or education with reference to which he will do all his actions; for not having one's life organized with reference to some end is a sign of much folly [EE 1216b6-11]. An overall structure of goods is arguably part of rational action. We think it a mark of irrationality if someone consciously prefers and so pursues good x, rather than y, even though y is more important to her. We would think it irrational to pursue x unless it is true that x does not conflict 1 Though all three works are Aristotelian in nature and provide valuable evidence about Aristotle's ethical theory, only the NE appears to be uncontroversially authentic. It is uncertain whether the MM is a work of Aristotle's or one of his students, though that needn t prevent the MM from providing reliable information about Aristotle s ethical views. Though it is more common to view the EE as authentic, some scholars dispute this. Three books (NE V- VII and EE IV- VI) are common books. Those that regard the EE as authentic often suppose that the EE is earlier, though this is not undisputed.

2 with some greater available good. This requires a synchronic structuring of goods. But similar considerations suggest the need for a diachronic structuring of goods. Because I am a temporally extended being and this fact conditions my present desires in the sense that my present desires all have future objects, it would be irrational for me to pursue my present desires and ends at the expense of the desires and ends that I will have. So it will be rational for me to pursue some present good x just in case it contributes to a greater overall good than alternatives. The demand for a well- integrated, diachronic conception of the good is the demand for a final good. The final good is that for whose sake we pursue other things but which - - alone - - we pursue for its own sake (1094a18-19). If it's true that action is rational insofar as it aims at one's final good and we conceive of ourselves as rational agents, then it may be appropriate to see our all actions as implicitly and imperfectly directed at a final good. If one fails to promote one's own final good, this will be due to mistakes of fact (e.g. about the appropriate means to the good), mistaken beliefs about the final good (e.g. about its constituents), or weakness of will. EUDAIMONIA Aristotle claims that everyone agrees that eudaimonia is the final good; they disagree in their conceptions of eudaimonia (1095a17-21, 1097b22-3). Here, as elsewhere, his method is dialectical: he begins by examining the appearances (phainomena), especially common and respected beliefs (endoxa), including those of his predecessors. Employing this method, Aristotle begins (in NE I 5) by examining three common conceptions of eudaimonia. He notes that there are three lives that should be examined - - the life of enjoyment, the life of political activity, and the life of contemplation - because these lives reflect common conceptions of happiness (1095b15-19). He goes on to discuss three conceptions of happiness - - pleasure, honor, and virtue - - though he indicates that he will need to examine the life of contemplation and its conception of happiness later (1096a5), presumably in Ethics X 7-8. Pleasure is the conception of eudaimonia embodied in the life of gratification, and both honor and virtue could be associated with a life of political activity or practical reason. Though each conception provides part of a plausible conception, none is adequate by itself (1095b16-1096a4). The life of (pure) pleasure is fit for grazing animals, not for humans. The life of honor is too passive and is too much outside agent's control. Finally, the life of virtue is almost correct, but is not complete because it may lack various goods that are not fully within our control. These criticisms reflect three assumptions about eudaimonia. 1. The final good must be complete. 2. The final good must be an appropriate life for human beings. 3. The final good should be relatively, though perhaps not completely, stable and within our control. Appropriateness explains why the life of gratification, while suitable for grazing animals, is not suitable for rational animals. Appropriateness, stability, and control explain why the life of honor is unsuitable, because it is too passive and too dependent on the recognitions of others. Finally, completeness explains why virtue is insufficient for happiness; even if virtue is the most important element of happiness, it does not guarantee against misfortune and so cannot secure a complete good. This discussion is incredibly compressed. If it were intended to be self- contained, it would be very unsatisfactory. But it is a summary of the argument to come and is not intended to be dispositive. These assumptions and their implications for the content of eudaimonia are elaborated in the rest of Book I. Appropriateness is elaborated in Chapter 7 in the function argument, which supports the conclusion that a good life must be one that realizes our nature as rational beings who can regulate their beliefs, passions, appetites, and actions by reasoning about what is fine or fitting (kalon). A

3 life so regulated expresses the virtues, both theoretical and practical. But, as Aristotle explains in Chapters 8-11, eudaimonia must also be complete and lacking in nothing. Virtue, however important, cannot be a complete good. Some choiceworthy things, including our own health and the well- being of loved ones, are not fully within our control and hence are fortuitous or external goods. Completeness requires such external goods in addition to virtue. In Chapter 10 Aristotle insists that the final good should also be something stable and not easily upset; it should be largely, albeit not completely, within our control. This constraint is reconciled with the other two by insisting that the virtues control (kuriai) eudaimonia (1100b11-22). Virtue is not sufficient for happiness, and it might come at the expense of other goods, but it is the most important element of happiness and is always a price worth paying. Here, Aristotle agrees with Plato s Republic II claim that the agent is always better off choosing virtue, regardless of the cost (1100b18-1101a15). Taken together, these constraints support a comprehensive or inclusive conception of eudaimonia that includes intellectual and practical virtues and a full life containing various external goods (1101a15-17). Though the intellectualism introduced in Book X raises questions about the overall consistency of Aristotle s claims about eudaimonia, the formal constraints in Book I support a comprehensive conception of eudaimonia. 2 COMPLETENESS Aristotle claims that eudaimonia is complete (teleios), self- sufficient (autarkês), and choiceworthy (hairetos) (1097a26- b21). Self- sufficiency and choiceworthiness appear to be further aspects of completeness. 3 Complete goods are final goods, choiceworthy for themselves. By contrast, incomplete goods are not chosen for their own sakes. But completeness and finality are matters of degree. The most complete or final goods are unconditionally complete goods, which are chosen for their own sakes and not chosen for the sake of anything else. Eudaimonia is the only unconditionally complete good. Some goods are complete or final, but not completely or unconditionally so. Merely complete goods are choiceworthy for their own sakes but also are choiceworthy for the sake of eudaimonia, perhaps as parts are chosen for the sakes of the wholes of which they are parts (1097a26- b7). It follows that there are two different ways in which something may be chosen for the sake of something else. Sometimes when x is chosen for the sake of y, x has no value itself and is a mere instrumental means to producing something else that is valuable. Here, x is an incomplete and instrumental good. However, in other cases, x is chosen for the sake of y, where x is valuable as constituent of y. Here x has contributory value and is good in itself. This idea that something might be good both in itself and for the sake of the larger whole of which it is a part is not unfamiliar. My philosophy articles have structure; they defend larger aims by a series of arguments and so have constituent sub- aims. When I work on a particular sub- argument, I want to get that argument right both for its own sake and for or because of its 2 For a contrary, intellectualist reading of Book I, see Richard Kraut, Aristotle on the Human Good (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1989). My own view is that a comprehensive conception provides a better interpretation of the first nine books of the EN and better satisfies Aristotle s formal criteria for eudaimonia than does the strict intellectualist conception. However, it is worth noting that the same worry about reconciling completeness and realism about eudaimonia that I explore for the comprehensive conception of eudaimonia would also arise for the strict intellectualist conception. Contemplation is appropriate for divine beings (1177a13-18, 1177b27-1178a10, 1178b8-31), and rational animals could at most hope to approximate divinity. It would always be possible to approximate divinity more fully, with the result that few, if any, rational animals enjoy a complete intellectualist good. 3 See, e.g., John Ackrill, Aristotle on Eudaimonia reprinted in Essays on Aristotle s Ethics, ed. A. Rorty (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1980) and Terence Irwin, Permanent Happiness: Aristotle and Solon Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy 3 (1985): 89-124.

4 constituent role in my larger argument. Aristotle claims that the virtues are fine (kalon) and choiceworthy for their own sakes (1105a32, 1144a19). In doing so, he makes explicit the sort of assumptions Plato must make about the relationship between justice and eudaimonia in Republic II when Socrates aims to show that justice is good for its own sake, as well as for its consequences, where being good for its own sake means contributing constitutively to the agent s own eudaimonia. Individual goods are complete goods if they are chosen for their own sakes. The only unconditionally complete good is eudaimonia or a good life. Aristotle goes on to tell us that it is self- sufficient and most choiceworthy (1097b8-21). We might suppose that a self- sufficient good will be one which one can have all on one's own, independent of others. But Aristotle denies this, insisting that we are political animals and that our happiness depends upon family, friends, and fellow citizens (1097b10-11). Instead, he means that for a complete good to be self- sufficient is for it to contain everything within itself, to be lacking in nothing. A good that is lacking in nothing must be most choiceworthy. Consider some putative final good {x and y}. If I can improve on that good by adding z, that shows that the putative final good was not in fact most choiceworthy. But then it was not lacking in nothing and, hence, it was not complete. A good that could be improved by adding other elements would not be complete and would not be most choiceworthy (1097b16-21; cf. MM 1184a7-29). We might wonder how completeness is related to being self- sufficient and most choiceworthy. In particular, why must a final good be a maximally inclusive good? The answer seems to appeal to Aristotle s conception of eudaimonia as a most final or unconditionally complete good. To be unconditionally complete, eudaimonia must not be valuable as part of some larger, more valuable whole. But then eudaimonia must contain all genuine goods within it, which is to say that it must be self- sufficient, lacking in nothing, and most choiceworthy. THE HUMAN FUNCTION Aristotle believes that a proper account of our final good depends upon an account of what sort of beings we are and what our function is (1097b24 1098a16). The function of craftsmen and artifacts consists in their performing their characteristic activities, and if appeal to our function is to ground an account of our final good, it looks as if Aristotle must claim that performing these activities well is good for the thing for whom these activities are its function. Do people have functions? Artifacts (e.g. knives) have functions (e.g. cutting well), because they are designed to perform these activities (e.g. to cut). Aristotle thinks that natural organisms can be ascribed functions even if they are not the result of intelligent design. His general account of teleology implies that an organism or a part of an organism has a function just in case it is a goal directed system in which the achievement of certain goals or states explains the behavior of the system. An account of x's good must reflect what x's function is or what x essentially is. De Anima gives an account of the functions (souls) of different organisms and beings. These functions depend on different capacities. a. Capacities for self- movement (413a20-35), including growth, reproduction, and nutrition. b. Capacities for sensation (413b1-25), including perception, imagination, pleasure and pain, desire, and action. c. Capacities for reflection (413b25-34), including practical and theoretical reasoning, which depend upon imagination to a greater extent. The later functions typically involve or presuppose the earlier one(s) (414a30- b15), and different sorts of souls correspond to these three functions. Thus plants are those organisms that exercise only (a)- type functions; animals are those who also exercise (b)- type functions; and rational

5 animals are those who also exercise (c)- type functions; and gods are disembodied beings who exercise theoretical reason only. It's worth noticing that imagination involves the capacity to represent situations, actual or merely possible, that are not part of one's immediate perception. Imagination plays some role in animal sensation, as when Rusty digs for the bone she believes buried in the yard. But imagination plays a larger role in theoretical and practical reasoning, inasmuch as this often involves working out the consequences of alternative possible actions and hypotheses. The peculiar function of humans is not the single activity that they and they alone perform, but the organized cluster of activities that they and they alone perform. For instance, as Tom Nagel notes, only in this way can we understand the peculiar function of a Swiss Army knife. 4 But neither should we understand the functions of various sorts of organisms as a mere conjunction of independent capacities and activities. Higher functions do not just add more capacities; the higher capacities modify or transform the operation of the lower capacities. Humans are self- movers whose movement reflects reasoning about which perceptual representations to endorse, which pleasures to bring about and pains to avoid, and how to reproduce, grow, and get nourishment. Our doing well, Aristotle believes, consists in the exercise of this ordered set of capacities (1098a12-16). This last inference may seem suspicious. Does it follow that x's performing its function well is good for x? The function of a purebred retriever may be, in part, to present a certain physical appearance, including a long waist, but realizing this function may not be good for the dog if it causes hip dysplasia. The function of the king's food- taster may be to thwart attempts to poison the king, but performing this function well may not be good for the food- taster. A prostitute's function may be to solicit and perform kinky sex as often as possible, but being this sort of sex machine is not obviously good for the person who is a prostitute. 5 x's performing her function F may benefit her qua F, but may not benefit her as a person or human. But this worry won't arise about the benefits of performing human functions, for this principle assures us that the person (human) will benefit from performing her (human) function. This may seem merely to push the problem back a step. Why should someone associate his doing well with his benefit as a human being, rather than his benefit as a prostitute or food- taster? But Aristotle can argue that I am essentially a human being (F) and not essentially a prostitute or food- taster (G); I can exist and could have existed without G, but not without F. I must be concerned about the good of the sort of being I am essentially. If so, what I am essentially will benefit by performing the human function well. 6 EXTERNAL GOODS Because a complete good is self- sufficient, it is lacking in nothing and most choiceworthy. For this reason, completeness requires the recognition of external goods. Further, deprivation of certain [externals] - - e.g. good birth, good children, beauty - - mars our blessedness; for we do not altogether have the character of happiness if we look utterly repulsive or are ill born, solitary or childless, and have it even less, presumably, if our children or friends are totally bad, or were good but have died [1099b2 5]. 4 Thomas Nagel, Aristotle on Eudaimonia reprinted in Essays on Aristotle s Ethics, ed. A. Rorty. 5 The example is used in Jennifer Whiting's useful article, "Aristotle's Function Argument: A Defense" Ancient Philosophy 8 (1989). 6 Here I leave to one side worries that I am essentially a (particular) person, rather than a (particular) human being. If I am essentially a person and only contingently a human being - - if, for instance, I could survive disembodied or in a nonhuman body provided my rational agency was preserved - - then my ultimate concern would be to realize the function of a person and I would be concerned to realize the function of a human only insofar as this realized the function of a person.

6 One doesn t have to agree with all of the things Aristotle recognizes as external goods or evils or with the importance he attaches to different ones to agree that there are some things - - such as the well- being of family and friends and health - - that are outside the agent's control and yet affect the completeness of her happiness. He says that only a philosopher concerned to defend his theory would deny the value of external goods (1096a1 3). That is why the happy person needs to have goods of the body and external goods added, and needs fortune also, so that he will not be impeded in these ways. Some maintain, on the contrary, that we are happy when we are broken on the rack, or fall into terrible misfortunes, provided that we are good [virtuous]. Whether they mean to or not, these people are talking nonsense [VIII 3 1153b17-21]. Presumably, Aristotle has Socrates in mind here and his belief that virtue is sufficient for happiness - - that is, a complete good. But in this respect Aristotle s position also contrasts with the Stoic position that identifies virtue and happiness, implying that virtue is sufficient for happiness and famously treating goods of fortune as preferred indifferents. 7 But it is important to be clear about different ways that externals affect happiness. Aristotle assigns two kinds of value to externals. 8 One kind of value that he sometimes assigns externals is as a necessary condition for the realization of virtues that are parts of happiness, as, for example, both generosity and magnificence require resources for redistribution (1099a31 33). 9 Here, externals may be necessary for developing the capacity for virtue or for the practice of a virtue. But when Aristotle argues against Socrates in these passages, he claims that some externals contribute directly to one s happiness by embellishing or marring it (1099b1-7, 1100a6-8, 1100b27). Here, externals make a direct contribution to eudaimonia, enhancing or diminishing it in themselves. I want to focus on this second kind of value that externals have as constituents, rather than necessary conditions, of eudaimonia. 10 Among the externals that Aristotle discusses are some beyond the agent s capacity to recognize (1100a20). He doesn't suggest what these might be, but it is not hard to imagine. If I have already lost contact with a loved one, and then unbeknownst to me she dies, it seems I have suffered a loss, whether I realize it or not. Or suppose my friend or spouse is secretly unfaithful to me. Isn't this a misfortune that a complete life would not contain? These are things one would 7 See Diogenes Laertius, Lives of Eminent Philosophers, vii 89, 102, 107, 127 and Cicero, De Finibus Bonorum et Malorum iii 11, 20-39. Terence Irwin provides an excellent comparative analysis of Aristotelian and Stoic conceptions of happiness, completeness, and the role of virtue within happiness in Stoic and Aristotelian Conceptions of Happiness in The Norms of Nature, ed. M. Schofield and G. Striker (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1986). Julia Annas provides another useful comparison of Aristotelian and Stoic conceptions of happiness in The Morality of Happiness (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1993). Also see Russell, Virtue and Happiness in the Lyceum and Beyond. 8 See Irwin, Permanent Happiness, esp. pp. 95-97. 9 The dependence of some virtues, such as magnificence, on a level of external goods not required by the other virtues, may raise a question about whether Aristotle can defend either the unity or the inseparability of the virtues. 10 Some commentators emphasize the connection between externals and virtue, ignoring this second kind of constitutive value that externals can have. See, e.g., John Cooper, Aristotle on the Goods of Fortune Philosophical Review 94 (1985): 173-96 and Martha Nussbaum, The Fragility of Goodness (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1986), esp. chs. 11-12. But I see no good reason for denying that Aristotle also recognizes the constitutive value that externals can have as part of a complete good, reflected in these passages.

7 choose to do without. They are examples of what we might call contemporaneous unrecognized external goods and evils. But their recognition and the completeness constraint suggest the possibility of posthu- mous goods and harms. Solon tells us that we should not pronounce on a person's happiness until after he is dead, for only then will he be beyond misfortune (1100a10 19; cf. EE 1219b4-8 and MM 1185a5-9). But the possibility of posthumous goods and misfortunes suggests that pronouncements even at the graveside may be premature. My children and projects may succeed or fail, and why shouldn't these successes or failures, like contemporaneous unrecognized harms, add or detract from the significance and value of my life? Certainly, one would choose to do without them. Aristotle treats the issues surrounding recognition of posthumous goods and harms as raising a puzzle, and he warns against making a person's fate depend too much on such goods (1100a23-30). But he thinks we ought to recognize such goods, provided we don't assign them too much importance. Posthumous benefits and harms may be of comparatively less significance and presumably will diminish in proportion to the strength of their connection with the activities and relationships engaged in during the agent's life, but they are real benefits and harms (1100a19 23, 1100a30 1, 1101a23 30). THE DOMINANCE OF VIRTUE So completeness requires recognition of external goods as both necessary conditions and parts of happiness. But Aristotle does not think of externals as being as important to happiness as virtue. Severe misfortunes may rob a virtuous person of happiness, but (a) they cannot make a virtuous person miserable, and (b) a person is always better off choosing virtue over any amount of e goods (1098b15 16, 1099b17 27, 1100b1 11, 1100b31 34). But surely it is quite wrong to be guided [in our judgments of happiness] by someone's misfortunes. For his doing well or badly does not rest on them; though a human life, as we said, needs these added, it is the activities expressing virtue that control happiness, and the contrary activities that control its contrary [1100b8 10]. Aristotle's claim here about the dominance of virtue invites comparison with Socrates and Plato. Though he rejects Socrates's belief that virtue is sufficient for happiness, because he recognizes some externals as components of happiness, he agrees with Plato's comparative claim in the Republic that one is always better off being virtuous than not. Virtue may exct a price in some circumstances, if only in the form of the opportunity costs of virtue, but it is always a price worth paying. Of course, it s one thing to assert that virtue is the dominant componenet of happiness; it s another thing to defend that claim. A proper defense is possible only in light of Aristotle s discussion of friendship (see below). But we can see how Aristotle might think that the dominance claim is supported by his formal constraints on eudaimonia. The dominance of virtue can appeal to the second and third formal conditions or constraints on happiness. The function argument implies that happiness consists largely in the life of activity expressing one's rational capacities. The life of virtue is such a life, whereas a life filled with externals is not (1099b25 8). This implies and is reinforced by the condition that happiness must be largely within our power and not easily taken from us, because being virtuous, Aristotle believes, is largely up to us, whereas external goods are not (1099b18 20, 1100b1 7,12 15; EE 1215a8-18). The dominance of virtue highlights a kind of tension in Aristotle's formal criteria of happiness between completeness, on the one hand, and stability and control on the other. The life that is fully within our control will not be complete, and the life that is most complete will not be fully within our control. There is no inconsistency here provided Aristotle does not assume that happiness is completely within our control, and he does not. This allows him to identify the most

8 important part of happiness with that part that is largely within our control, viz. virtue, while recognizing that various externals, though largely out of our control, are genuine goods. The function argument may actually harmonize these constraints in a certain way. For Aristotle thinks that human life is essentially embodied and social in nature, but these are the two principal sources and uses of externals (e.g. health, physical appearance, social station, friends, and community). It is a condition of exercising some of the virtues that one have certain externals (e.g. health for any virtue, wealth for generosity and magnificence, and other people for friendship and political community), and many of the virtues concern the proper use of externals (e.g. gener- osity and magnificence). If so, then a life expressing well the human function will be a life that is virtuous and is appropriately supplied with and makes appropriate use of externals. Then why not say that the happy person is the one who expresses complete virtue in his activities, with an adequate supply of external goods, not just for any time but for a complete life? [1101a14 15] COMPREHENSIVE AND INTELLECTUALIST CONCEPTIONS OF HAPPINESS The picture of eudaimonia in book I appears to be comprehensive in the sense that it includes external goods as well as virtue and both intellectual virtues and practical virtues or virtues of character (1103a5 6). Aristotle elaborates the distinction between intellectual and practical virtues in NE VI. The intellectual virtues exercise capacities of theoretical reason, reasoning about what is necessary and not up to us (e.g. in contemplating God and celestial bodies). They include contemplation or study (theoria), scientific knowledge (episteme), and understanding (nous). By contrast, the practical virtues (e.g. temperance, justice, friendship) involve reasoning about what is up to us. The practical virtues involve intelligence (phronesis) displayed in correct deliberation and decision (prohairesis). Intelligence can be exercised in both crafts (techne), which are undertaken for the sake of something else, and actions (praxis), which are undertaken for their own sakes. The virtues of character exercise capacities of practical reason concerning how to live and act. As we will see, the virtues of character involve agreement between the rational and non- rational parts of the soul. So practical virtues require more than proper deliberation and decision. They also require proper training and habituation of the appetites, encouraging agents to take pleasure in the right things (II 1-5). 11 Most of the rest of the NE is devoted to a study of the virtues of character, either to the nature and conditions of such virtues in general (e.g. NE II- III, VII) or of specific such virtues - - assorted virtues in iii and iv (e.g. bravery and temperance in iii; generosity, magnificence, and magnanimity in IV), justice in V, and friendship in VIII- IX. Both the completeness of eudaimonia and the function argument support such a comprehensive conception, and NE II- IX confirms this expectation. This apparently overwhelming commitment to a comprehensive conception of eudaimonia explains why many commentators wish that Aristotle had never written NE X 7 8. In X 6 Aristotle returns to a general discussion of happi- ness, apparently resuming the discussion from book I. In X 7 8 he appears to claim that theoretical reason or contemplation is not only the most, but indeed the exclusive good. This conception of eudaimonia is sometimes called strict intellectualism. Hence the activity of the gods that is superior in blessedness will be an activity of study. And so the human activity that it most akin to the god's will, more than any others, 11 It s unclear to me whether the first principles of ethical science are necessary truths that might be the object of contemplation, rather than deliberation. If so, this might be one explanation of Aristotle s famous claim that deliberation, which is about what is not necessary and is up to us, concerns not ends, but what promotes ends (112b12-14, 1112b 32-35).

9 have the character of happiness. A sign of this is the fact that other animals have no share in happiness, being completely deprived of this activity of study. For the whole life of the gods is blessed to the extent that it has something resembling this sort of activity; but none of the other animals is happy, because none of them shares in study at all. Hence happiness extends just as far as study extends, and the more someone studies, the happier he is, not coincidentally but insofar as he studies, since study is valuable in itself. And so happiness will be some kind of study [1178b22-31]. Why is Aristotle attracted to strict intellectualism? At one point, he appeals to the divinity of contemplation (1177a13-18, 1177b27-1178a10, 1178b8-31). 1. Happiness should be identified with the best or most divine elements. 2. Contemplation is most godlike, because it is the activity characteristic of gods. 3. Hence, our happiness should be identified with contemplation. But this appeal seems to run afoul of the function argument. After all, we are humans or rational animals, not gods. Indeed, we are essentially rational animals; were we to be transformed into gods, this would be a substantial change. But that means it wouldn't be good for us to undergo such a transformation, even if gods have better lives than rational animals. Hence there is this puzzle: do friends really wish their friend to have the greatest good, e.g. to be a god? For [if he becomes a god], he will no longer have friends, and hence no longer have goods, since friends are good. If, then, we have been right to say that one friend wishes good things to the other for the sake of the other himself, the other must remain whatever sort of being he is. Hence it is to the other as a human being that a friend will wish the greatest goods... [1159a6-12]. Aristotle seems to recognize this same point in NE X 8 where, after apparently endorsing contemplation, he suggests that contemplation is not fit for humans. However, the happy person is a human being, and so will need external prosperity also; for his nature is not self sufficient for study, but he needs a healthy body, and needs to have food and other services provided [1178b33 5; cf. 1178a19 21, 1178b5 8]. A similar appeal to the human function argues for recognition of the practical virtues as part of happiness. Aristotle also appeals to our control over contemplation in defense of strict intellectualism (1177a27-35, 1178a24-8). 1. The life of contemplation is most within our control. 2. Happiness must be within our control. 3. Hence, happiness must consist in contemplation alone. Aristotle puts this point by claiming that contemplation is a more "self sufficient" good. This is unfortunate language, because self- sufficiency was understood in book I (1097b7 15) to indicate that happiness must be lacking in nothing, not that it must be within our control. And this is the main problem with Aristotle's appeal to control. Even if the life of contemplation is more within

10 our control than a life including the virtues of character, 12 Aristotle does not believe that happiness need be fully within our control. Indeed, as we have seen, if happiness is to be self- sufficient or complete, it cannot plausibly be thought to be fully within our control. And a life of pure contemplation seems not to be a complete good (cf. MM 1184a37-38). Aristotle responds that contemplation is not incomplete, because the virtues of character are only appropriate for embodied intellects or psychophysical compounds, which the gods are not (1178b9 17). This would perhaps be a good defense of the completeness of contemplation for beings, such as the gods, who are essentially only intellect, but it fails for beings, such as humans, who are essentially embodied. Because of this fact about us, our happiness will be more complete when we possess various practical virtues, including friendship, and the right external goods. Must we conclude that Aristotle is just inconsistent in his claims about eudaimonia and that his later intellectualist claims are simply lame? The most common verdict in the secondary literature reluctantly accepts this as unavoidable inconsistency in the text. 13 In Aristotle on the Human Good Richard Kraut has proposed a heroic interpretation of Aristotle as a consistent intellectualist. He reads the function argument as an argument for identifying happiness with the exercise of the most supreme element in human nature (1098a16 19) and claims that practical virtues and externals are chosen for the sake of contemplation. Though heroic, this view seems unattractive. First, 1098a16-19 claims that "if there are more virtues than one, the good will express the best and most complete virtue". This does not imply that the good is to be identified with contemplation. For we've just been told that a complete good must be lacking in nothing, and Aristotle clearly thinks completeness requires a complex or plural good. But then the most complete virtue for humans will not select a proper part of virtue but rather the whole of virtue. Second, this reading of the function argument does not respect Aristotle's claim that the human good consists in the exercise of essential human capacities and conflicts with the pluralistic implications of the completeness requirement. Third, this reading of the value of the virtues of character and externals does not appear to fit Aristotle's claims. Though "for the sake of" does not always refer to an instrumental relation, presumably it would have to on this intellectualist view. In order for x to be chosen for the sake of y and for x to be intrinsically valuable, x must be a constituent part of y, where y is intrinsically valuable. But even if externals or practical virtues are necessary conditions or causal means to contemplation, it's very unclear how either could be a part of contemplation. So if happiness consists in contemplation, as the intellectualist interpretation claims, these things must be only instrumentally valuable and only when they are means or necessary conditions for contemplation. But Aristotle treats both as valuable for their own sakes (externals: 1099b1-7, 1100a6-8, 1100b27; virtue: 1105a32, 1144a19), and he gives no sign of restricting their value to contexts in which they are productive of contemplation. An alternative strategy for a consistent reading of Aristotle s eudaimonist claims would try to reconcile the apparent intellectualism of book X with the comprehensive conception that seems to be a commitment of the rest of the NE. Jennifer Whiting and Terry Irwin have explored this possibility. 14 They suggest that we can reconcile intellectualist and comprehensive claims if the former assert only comparative or conditional theses. 12 Though Aristotle does think that contemplation is more within our control than the virtues of character, he admits that even contemplation requires externals; the contemplator needs her health, intellectual training (i.e. education), and leisure, and her contemplation is enhanced when she has colleagues with whom to talk (1177a28 b1, 1177b5-, 1178a24 29). 13 A representative verdict of inconsistency is John Cooper, Reason and Human Good in Aristotle. 14 See Jennifer Whiting, Human Nature and Intellectualism in Aristotle Archiv für Geschicte der Philosophie 68(1986) and Irwin s Notes to the NE, p. 397.

11 1. Contemplation is the single activity that best fits the criteria for happiness. 2. If happiness must be some single activity, contemplation is the best candidate. 3. If happiness includes more than one activity, contemplation will be the most important. 4. Happiness consists in contemplation alone. The comprehensive conception could perhaps endorse (1)- (3) but not (4). Some endorsements of contemplation can be understood in comparative or conditional terms. However, other endorsements of contemplation seem to defy such analysis (e.g. 1178b25-29). Hence the activity of the gods that is superior in blessedness will be an activity of study. And so the human activity that it most akin to the god's will, more than any others, have the character of happiness. A sign of this is the fact that other animals have no share in happiness, being completely deprived of this activity of study. For the whole life of the gods is blessed to the extent that it has something resembling this sort of activity; but none of the other animals is happy, because none of them shares in study at all. Hence happiness extends just as far as study extends, and the more someone studies, the happier he is, not coincidentally but insofar as he studies, since study is valuable in itself. And so happiness will be some kind of study [1178b22-31, italics added]. It s hard to see how to square the italicized phrases in this passage with the comprehensive reading. For this reason, I think it s hard to avoid the conclusion that Aristotle s claims about happiness are inconsistent. However, this does not prevent us from concluding that his predominant and best commitment is to the comprehensive conception. That conception is supported not only by the crucial claims in book i but also by the body of the NE in books II- IX. Strict intellectualism is flirted with only briefly in book X and the arguments there on its behalf are seriously inadequate and inconsistent with the rest of the NE. EUDAIMONIC AND MORAL VIRTUE Much of the NE is concerned with the various virtues. Given Aristotle's eudaimonism and, especially the function argument, we might expect him to identify, individuate, and explain the various virtues by reference to the agent's good or to the exercise of the agent's essential capacities. We might call such virtues eudaimonic virtues. But, for the most part, this is not his procedure. His concern is with fairly familiar virtues, such as bravery, temperance, generosity, and justice. Such virtues are fairly standard entries on lists of moral virtues, and, for Aristotle, they form the principal subject matter of political science. In fact, Aristotle identifies, individuates, and explains these virtues by the fact that they are states of character that are fine (kalon) and praiseworthy (1103a10, 1120a24, 1122b6 8). We might call such virtues moral virtues. It is commonly thought that eudaimonic and moral conceptions of the virtues are quite different, perhaps incompatible, much as psychic and conventional virtues may seem irreconcilable in Plato's ethical theory. Because Aristotle begins the NE with a eudaimonic conception, it is sometimes assumed either that his conception of ethics is quite different from our conception of morality or that if he links these two conceptions he does so without proper justification. Later, I will return to the relationship between eudaimonic and moral virtue and argue that Aristotle's discussion of friendship can and should be seen as way of connecting eudaimonic and moral virtues. Here I only note that his discussion of virtues of character stresses the moral, rather than the eudaimonic, aspects of these virtues. VIRTUE, REASON, AND DESIRE Aristotle initiates his general discussion of virtue as a discussion of eudaimonic virtue. The human function is activity of the soul in accordance with reason. The virtues of character concern

12 both the part of the soul that has reason and the part that obeys reason (1098a3 5, 1102b13 1103a3). Virtue is the condition in which the nonrational part of the soul that can obey reason does so and harmonizes with rational choice (1102b25 8). The virtues (of character) require correct deliberation and decision. But this is not enough. They also require proper training and habituation of the appetites, in which agents learn to take pleasure in the right things (II 1-5). Unlike crafts, which are undertaken for ends beyond themselves, virtuous actions are undertaken for their own sakes (1140b7-8), and they must be performed from a stable state of character. The agent must not merely conform to the behavioral demands of virtue, but choose virtuous action for its own sake (1144a14-20). Rather, the agent must be in the right state when he does them. First, he must know [that he is doing virtuous actions second, he must decide on them, and decide on them for themselves; and, third, he must do them from a firm and unchanging state [1105a30-35]. There are four possible relations between these two parts of the soul that are important to Aristotle's moral psychology (1102b14-28 an vii 1-10, esp. 1145a15- b2, 1148a13-1150a10, 1151a29-1152a35). 1. Virtue: the rational and nonrational parts agree in pursuing the right ends. 2. Continence: the rational and nonrational parts disagree; the rational part chooses the right ends; the nonrational part chooses the wrong ends; and the rational part wins. 3. Incontinence: the rational and nonrational parts disagree; the rational part chooses the right ends; the nonrational part chooses the wrong ends; and the nonrational part wins. 4. Vice: the rational and nonrational parts of the soul agree in pursuing the wrong ends. This taxonomy avoids the familiar, but oversimple, two- fold classification of characters into virtuous or vicious. 15 Note different patterns within this taxonomy. (a) Virtue and vice both involve agreement between the rational and nonrational parts of the soul, whereas continence and incontinence both involve conflicts between these two parts. (b) In the case of virtue and continence, the agent acts as he should, whereas in the case of incontinence and vice he does not. (c) In the case of virtue, continence, and incontinence the agent makes the right judgment, whether or not he acts on it, whereas only the vicious person forms the wrong judgment. Can the virtuous person experience conflict? This taxonomy, especially the distinction between virtue and mere continence, may suggest that the virtuous person experiences no conflict or regret. On one interpretation, the truly virtuous person sees no conflict between the demands of virtue and other options. Virtue, on this view, does not outweigh or override other reasons; it silences them altogether. 16 Considerations that would otherwise provide reasons for action altogether lack practical significance when pitted against the demands of virtue. In matters of temperance and bravery, actions are not enough. [W]e must take as a sign of someone's state his pleasure or pain in consequence of his action. For if someone who abstains from bodily pleasures enjoys the abstinence itself, then he is temperate, but if he is grieved by it, he is intemperate. Again, if he stands firm against 15 Sometimes, Aristotle mentions a fifth state of bestiality, in which the agent is controlled by appetite and passion and either lacks deliberation or has it corrupted beyond repair (1145a24-32) 16 McDowell develops this idea in "Virtue and Reason" The Monist 52 (1979) and The Role of Eudaimonia in Aristotle s Ethics reprinted in Essays on Aristotle s Ethics, ed. A. Rorty.

13 terrifying situations and enjoys it, or at least does not find it painful, then he is brave, and if he finds it painful, he is cowardly [1104b4-7]. This silencing interpretation need not make Aristotle fully Socratic. For while it implies, as Socrates claims, that virtue has no price, it can allow, as Socrates apparently cannot, that externals have value when not in competition with virtue. If so, this interpretation can allow, as Socrates cannot, that virtue is an incomplete good. Nonetheless, the silencing interpretation is not compelling. It's quite clear that Aristotle does not think that virtue is a complete good. But if externals have value independently of virtue, why should their value be limited by virtue so that they have no value whatsoever when they conflict with virtue? The common view is that virtue can have a price, even if it turns out to be a price well worth paying. Indeed, this seems to be Aristotle's view. The brave person will find death and wounds [potential costs of bravery] painful, and suffer them unwillingly, but he will stand firm against them because that is fine or because failure is shameful. Indeed, the more he has every virtue and the happier he is, the more pain he will feel at the prospect of death. For this sort of person, more than anyone, finds it worthwhile to be alive, and is knowingly deprived of the greatest goods, and this is painful. But he is no less brave for all that; presumably, indeed, he is all the braver, because he chooses what is fine in war at the cost of all these goods [1117b8-15; cf. EE 1229a7, MM 1191a26-29]. The only reason for supposing that Aristotle ought to deny this common view is the assumption that he must to make out his distinction between the virtuous and merely continent. But that distinction requires only that the virtuous person have a sufficiently steady and unwavering commitment to act as he judges best - - that he not be seriously tempted to act otherwise. But one can be steadfast in one's commitment to the virtuous course of action without insisting that virtue has no cost. One need only see that the cost is well worth paying, that is, as Aristotle says, that virtue is the controlling ingredient in eudaimonia. THE DOCTRINE OF THE MEAN Virtue is a mean between excess and deficiency of action or feeling (II 6). The doctrine of the mean is not a decision procedure; the right decision determines the mean, not the other way around (1106b36-1107b4, 1109a24-5). There is no mean with respect to base actions, such as adultery or murder, or base feelings, such as envy or childishness (1107a9-25; MM 1186a36- b3); and where there is a mean it is not always the mid- point (cf. 1106a33 b6). So what is the significance of the doctrine of the mean? In contrast with a Socratic account, it underscores the role of affective states in virtue. For example, magnanimity requires the proper mix of concern for self and the opinion of others; it requires not only curbing self- aggrandizement but also a healthy concern for oneself and pride in one's accomplishments. Virtue requires proper habituation and training of the nonrational parts of the soul. It also contrasts with a Kantian account of virtue or the good will. [T]here are many persons who are so sympathetically constituted, that without any further motive of vanity or self interest, they find an inner joy around them and can rejoice in the satisfaction of others as their own work. But I maintain that in such a case an action of this kind, however dutiful and amiable it might be, has nevertheless no true moral worth.... [It] accords with duty and is thus honorable, deserves praise and encouragement, but not esteem... Further still, if nature has put little sympathy in this or that man's heart, if (while being an honest man in other respects) he is by temperament cold and indifferent to the