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About the Author:
<%AUTHORBIO%>Aristotle was born in 384 BC at Stagira in Thrace. He was the son of Nicomachus, a physician to the king of Macedonia. At about the age of seventeen, Aristotle went to Athens to study and become a member of the Academy of Plato. After Plato’s death, Aristotle tutored Alexander the Great before founding his own school, the Lyceum.<%END%>
| Preface | ||
| Chronology | ||
| Introduction | ||
| Further reading | ||
| A note on the text | ||
| Synopsis | ||
| Bk. I | The object of life | 3 |
| Bk. II | Moral goodness | 31 |
| Bk. III | Moral responsibility : two virtues | 50 |
| Bk. IV | Other moral virtues | 82 |
| Bk. V | Justice | 112 |
| Bk. VI | Intellectual virtues | 144 |
| Bk. VII | Continence and incontinence : the nature of pleasure | 167 |
| Bk. VIII | The kinds of friendship | 200 |
| Bk. IX | The grounds of friendship | 228 |
| Bk. X | Pleasure and the life of happiness | 254 |
| App. 1 | Table of virtues and vices | 285 |
| App. 2 | Pythagoreanism | 287 |
| App. 3 | The sophists and Socrates | 289 |
| App. 4 | Plato's theory of forms | 292 |
| App. 5 | The categories | 295 |
| App. 6 | Substance and change | 296 |
| App. 7 | Nature and theology | 300 |
| App. 8 | The practical syllogism | 302 |
| App. 9 | Pleasure and process | 303 |
| App. 10 | Liturgies | 305 |
| App. 11 | Aristotle in the middle ages | 306 |
| Glossary of Greek words | 310 | |
| Index of names | 313 | |
| Subject index | 316 |
Anonymous
Posted June 7, 2006
As most philosophy professors would agree this book is a classic and should be read by all students before leaving college.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted December 16, 2003
Good book for someone who is learning or trying to understand the ancient philosophy and Greek philosophers.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted November 8, 2011
Does not have the Bekker page #s. Other than that it is okay.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Ethics nowadays is so confused and grouped with 'morals' that few consider the difference. Those who do use the argument for Ethics to veer the rest towards their own views and so 'Ethics' as a set of conduct is constantly hijacked by the 'righteous' for their own purposes.
It is great we still have Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics to remind us what it is all about.
And this new translation is conscise, clear, up-to-date and with plenty of endnotes conferring with other valued translations of the past and current academic debates regarding it.
Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics shows us that conduct is a choice only the human animal with our ability to question and to reason can develop into a set of ethics that brings us with equilibrium with ourselves, our community and planet. Making us thus greater than the sum of our individual parts as one gestalt entity, and as part of a community of humans.
It shows us our choices ought to be irrespective of fear of a hell or hope of a reward.
It is choices we ought to develop into habits, into our ethics for our humanity alone. For the benefit to our interactions with our families, friends, community, society and planet at-large.
With this in mind Aristotle proceeds then to clearly delineate, describe and quantify what these particular choices are that we develop normally but that should be actively and conscientiously sought out by us to make us better more wholesome human beings. Because if we are to live one life on this planet and nothing more, we should try and learn to be a positive part in it and of it. Thus become of value to ourselves, our community, our planet.
It is always with great interest I seek these arguments and am in my 2nd read of this very rewarding book.
Anonymous
Posted March 4, 2000
great book must read
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Overview
Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics is the first systematic treatise on ethics, and two millennia after it was written, it is still among the best. It speaks to human beings about themselves and their relations to others as clearly, forcefully, and systematically today as it did when it was written. It would also be hard to over estimate its historical importance. Virtually every moral philosopher has to deal with the issues grappled with in the Nicomachean Ethics, and many of the positions argued for by Aristotle have been adopted, sometimes in an almost wholesale fashion, by other philosophers.<%END%>About the Author:
%END%><%AUTHORBIO%>Aristotle was born in 384 BC at Stagira in ...%AUTHORBIO%>