1st Edition

Plato and Aristotle's Ethics

Edited By Robert Heinaman Copyright 2004
    216 Pages
    by Routledge

    216 Pages
    by Routledge

    This volume, emanating from the Fourth Keeling Colloquium in Ancient Philosophy, presents essays and comments by nine outstanding scholars of ancient philosophy, which examine the influence of Plato on the development of Aristotle's ethics. The essays focus on the role of pleasure in happiness and the good life (Christopher Taylor and Sarah Broadie), the irreducibility of ethical concepts to value-neutral concepts (Anthony Price and Sarah Broadie), the relation of virtue to happiness (Roger Crisp and Christopher Rowe, Terry Irwin and Sir Anthony Kenny), the role of the requirement of self-sufficiency in determining the content of happiness (John Cooper and Sir Anthony Kenny), and the question of whether the just man should be a participant in the political life of his city (Richard Kraut and Christopher Rowe).

    Contents: Introduction; Pleasure: Aristotle's response to Plato, C.C.W. Taylor; Reply to C.C.W. Taylor, Sarah Broadie; The irreducibility of the ethical in Plato and Aristotle, A.W. Price; Reply to A.W. Price, Sarah Broadie; Socrates and Aristotle on happiness and virtue, Roger Crisp; Reply to Roger Crisp, Christopher Rowe; Glaucon's challenge: does Aristotle change his mind?, T.H. Irwin; Reply to T.H. Irwin, Anthony Kenny; Plato and Aristotle on 'finality' and '(self-)sufficiency', John M. Cooper; Reply to John M. Cooper, Anthony Kenny; Justice in Plato and Aristotle: withdrawal versus engagement, Richard Kraut; Reply to Richard Kraut, Christopher Rowe; Indexes.

    Biography

    Robert Heinaman