Aristotle Poltics StudyGuide

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Race in the Ancient Mediterranean, Sec. 2, Fall 2013 Oct. 2, 2013 David M. Ratzan Artistotle on Citizens, Slaves, and Politics Assignment: READ: Nichomachean Ethics I.7, 13; Politics I.1-13; III.1-5; VII.1-4, 7, 9-10, 13-17; VIII.1-6. POST: Answers to 2 questions online, one from A-C and one from D, e.g., A1 and D4 or B2 and D3, etc. DUE: Midnight, Tues. Oct. 1, 2013 A. Nichomachean Ethics, Book 1 1. What does A. mean when he talks of virtue(arête)? Read the lyre-player analogy in 1.7 carefullyWhen A. says Plato is a “good person,” what does he mean? Does he seem to mean the same thing you mean when you call someone a “good person”? One of the big problems with reading A. is translation. I would suggest that “virtue” is a terrible translation for what A. meansit is just too Christian a word at this point. Can you think of a word to translation arête that capture what A. means when he speaks of “good” people? 2. How many parts are there to the soul, according to A. (1.13)? What does “soul” comprise in A. and does this differ from what you call “soul”? How might you translate this concept? How do the parts of the soul relate to each other? B. Politics, Book 1: The parameters of politics 1. In Pol. 1.2 Aristotle famously says that "man is a political animal" (cf. NE 1.7: "man is born for citizenship") and that the polis is "natural." What does he mean by these two statements and how does he "prove" them? What is the point of politics? What, for that matter, is a "polis" (cf. 3.1, 9)? To what extent do you think Philadelphia or the United States natural? 2. Aristotle begins with family relations because they are self-evidently the basic social unit, and as such many people (cf. 1.1) believe that these relations are only quantitatively different from political relations. A. disagrees. Why? 3. Another sub-political relationship to consider is master and slave (1.4-7, 13; cf. 3.4, 6, 9): how are master and slave related? Is this a natural relation? If so, how (remembering A.'s definition of nature)? Why is politics not an extended version of this relationship? 4. A. next turns to household management and trade (1.8-11; cf. 2.5, 3.8), since a polis is a community that has "reached the limit of total self-sufficiency, practically speaking"

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Race in the ancient Mediterranean

Transcript of Aristotle Poltics StudyGuide

Race in the Ancient Mediterranean, Sec. 2, Fall 2013Oct. 2, 2013 David M. Ratzan Artistotle on Citizens, Slaves, and Politics Assignment: READ: Nichomachean Ethics I.7, 13; Politics I.1-13; III.1-5; VII.1-4, 7, 9-10, 13-17; VIII.1-6. POST: Answers to 2 questions online, one from A-C and one from D, e.g., A1 and D4 or B2 and D3, etc. DUE: Midnight, Tues. Oct. 1, 2013 A. Nichomachean Ethics, Book 1 1.What does A. mean when he talks of virtue (arte)?Read the lyre-player analogy in 1.7 carefully When A. says Plato is a good person, what does he mean?Does he seem to mean the same thing you mean when you call someone a good person?One of the big problems with reading A. is translation.I would suggest that virtue is a terrible translation for what A. meansit is just too Christian a word at this point.Can you think of a word to translation arte that capture what A. means when he speaks of good people? 2.How many parts are there to the soul, according to A. (1.13)?What does soul comprise in A. and does this differ from what you call soul?How might you translate this concept?How do the parts of the soul relate to each other? B. Politics, Book 1: The parameters of politics 1.In Pol. 1.2 Aristotle famously says that "man is a political animal" (cf. NE 1.7: "man is born for citizenship") and that the polis is "natural."What does he mean by these two statements and how does he "prove" them?What is the point of politics?What, for that matter, is a "polis" (cf. 3.1, 9)?To what extent do you think Philadelphia or the United States natural? 2.Aristotle begins with family relations because they are self-evidently the basic social unit, and as such many people (cf. 1.1) believe that these relations are only quantitatively different from political relations.A. disagrees.Why? 3.Another sub-political relationship to consider is master and slave (1.4-7, 13; cf. 3.4, 6, 9): how are master and slave related?Is this a natural relation?If so, how (remembering A.'s definition of nature)?Why is politics not an extended version of this relationship? 4.A. next turns to household management and trade (1.8-11; cf. 2.5, 3.8), since a polis is a community that has "reached the limit of total self-sufficiency, practically speaking" Race in the Ancient Mediterranean, Sec. 2, Fall 2013Oct. 2, 2013 David M. Ratzan (1.2).What is his view of wealth and property and work and economic exchange?Can these be natural and unnatural, and if so in what way?Cf. NE 1.5, 4.1-2, 5.5.What are some conclusions that might be drawn from either position?Ultimately, it seems that A. would exclude a good chunk of what we would call economics from politics: why and what are the implications of this for politics? (A good question to ask on the eve of a government shut-down.) 5.We end Book 1 (1.12-13) with a review of the analogies of types of rule with which we began (1.1).How does his differentiation of the sorts of rule one has over one's slaves, fellows, wives and children recall what he said of the manner in which one rules oneself in the NE 1.7, 13? 6.One way of looking at Book 1 is that A. is trying to determine who may properly be said to be in a political relationship.So, who is it?(Cf. 3.1, 4-5, 12)Who gets excluded and on what grounds?Not everyone in the world gets to be a citizen of the United States, or a resident of New York City, or a student at Temple: on what basis do we limit participation in these communities? C. Politics, Book 3: Citizen and State 1.What is a citizen (3.1-2)?Can one live in a polis and not be a citizen? 2.What is the relationship between virtue and politics, between the good man and the good citizen (3.4, 12)?Or, put another way, what is the virtue (excellence, core competency, etc.) of a good citizen?What are some of the implications of the very existence of "political virtue" (see esp. 3.13)?How might this idea be extended to being a US citizen (or a citizen of any other state, if you are not an American citizen)? D. Politics, Book 7: Building the Ideal Polis 1.In 7.1-3 A. reviews the basic relationship of politics, or the correct form of social life, to ethics, or the correct form of living ones life: what is that relationship?What is the relationship of ethics to politics?Which comes first? 2.What is the best size for a polis (7.4)?What are the implications for the communities to which you belong? 3.7.7 should sound familiar.Where have we seen these ideas before?Has Aristotle done anything with them?How important is race to A.s conception of politics and the good life? (Cf. 7.13)How far should the legislator go in regulating the nature of a states citizens (7.16-17)? Race in the Ancient Mediterranean, Sec. 2, Fall 2013Oct. 2, 2013 David M. Ratzan 4.Who gets to be a citizen in the ideal polis? (7.10, cf. Book 3) 5.7.14-8.6 is all about education.Why is education so important to politics?Would you include a whole book on education in your treatise on the ideal state? 6.What kind of education does A. prescribe?How are free and slave used as concepts in his discussion of education?It is probably not going too far to see A.s ideal polis as defined by the line between free and slave: can you find some examples in these later chapters of A. drawing this line?Some will probably surprise you.Do they make sense?