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Aristotle 23 July 2008. The structure of the Politics Book I: The city and its function; the function of other natural communities Books II-VI: Imperfect.

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Presentation on theme: "Aristotle 23 July 2008. The structure of the Politics Book I: The city and its function; the function of other natural communities Books II-VI: Imperfect."— Presentation transcript:

1 Aristotle 23 July 2008

2 The structure of the Politics Book I: The city and its function; the function of other natural communities Books II-VI: Imperfect political communities –Book II: Other People’s Views –Books III-VI: Imperfect regimes Book VII-VIII: The best political community

3 The polis and other communities Family“Household”“Village”Polis Necessity Slavery Incompleteness Life Unnecessary goods Freedom Perfection The good life

4 Contrast: “Social Contract” views Is the city a kind of social contract designed for mutual benefit or mutual defence? –The polis is not simply an alliance designed for the production or trade of goods or mutual defence (III.9) –The goal of the polis is to foster the good character and virtue of the citizens, and hence the good life (III.9)

5 Freedom and slavery Free man –Pursues his own purposes rather than those of others –Is not constrained by the necessities of life –Citizen Slave –Pursues another’s purposes and view of the good –Is constrained by the necessities of life –Non-citizen

6 The city: a second look Book I defines the city in functional terms: a polis is whatever community ensures the full flourishing of human beings Book III defines the city in terms of its parts: a city is a group of citizens

7 Three questions about citizenship What is a citizen? Who ought to be a citizen? What is a good citizen?

8 What is a citizen? In theory: –Someone who can take part in the key judicial and deliberative bodies of a political community: someone who both rules and is ruled In practice: –Someone who meets the legal requirements for citizenship (e.g., someone who is born of citizen parents)

9 Who ought to be a citizen? Different constitutions or regimes (politeiai) give different answers to the question –Different people are thought to be qualified to rule in different sorts of regime So the question of who ought to be a citizen reduces to what is the best politeia

10 What is a good citizen? A good citizen is also relative to the constitution Nevertheless, a good citizen must be a free man –Could a craftsman or someone engaged in manual work be a truly free man? Is the good citizen simply a good person?

11 The craftsman and freedom

12 What kinds of regimes (politeiai) exist? Regimes where the ruler rules in the common interest –Monarchy –Aristocracy –Polity Regimes where the ruler rules in the interest of a part –Tyranny –Oligarchy Rule of the wealthy –Democracy Rule of the poor Six Basic Types

13 The citizen and the regime Citizen –All free men –Only wealthy free men –Only one person –Only the virtuous –A virtuous population Regime –Democracy –Oligarchy –Monarchy –Aristocracy or monarchy –Polity

14 The dialogue between the oligarch and the democrat Oligarch: Justice can’t be equality in everything: those who contribute the most must have a greater share of authority Democrat: the many together may possess as much property as the wealthy

15 The dialogue between the oligarch and the democrat Oligarch: It is unjust for the many to take away the property of the few Democrat: It is not unjust if it is done legally by those who are sovereign

16 The dialogue between the oligarch and the democrat Oligarch: The many are not able to reach good judgments about political matters, since they are not individually virtuous Democrat: Wealth is not identical with virtue, and at any rate the many together can reach good judgments about political matters

17 Is the crowd superior in wisdom to the few?

18 Under what conditions is the majority superior to the few? The many must not be too vicious There must be some diversity of abilities The few must not be too superior in virtue

19 Is this a defence of democracy?


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