Aristotle’s doctrine of voluntary actions differs as it is examined in the Eudemian and in the Nicomachean Ethics. For in the first, but not in the second, it displays as one of its conditions that the agent can not to do what she is about to do, and consequently voluntariness is put under the heading of what depends on thought. In the Nicomachean Ethics, however, this condition no more characterizes voluntariness, and the reference to what depends on thought is dropped out of the text. The main target of this paper is to elucidate this difference; some comments are also made to De motu animalium 11
Starting from Donini’s work about the Aristotelian treatises of ethics, the paper proposes some refl...
The aim of this work is to analyse the conditions for moral responsibility to Aristotle and how thes...
Within the contemporary political-ethical debate, the Aristotelian ethics of virtue is frequently in...
Dans l'Éthique à Eudème, Aristote conduit une analyse des notions des eph'hemin, du volontaire et de...
The main problem studied here is the Aristotelian doctrine of the unity of virtues. Aristotle accept...
Aristotle was the first theoretician of voluntary ambiguity in the texts. He defined and illustrated...
In the Nicomachean ethics book II, Aristotle presents his well known doctrine of the mean (mesovth~)...
This article presents an account of the two criteria provided by Aristotle to separate voluntary act...
I defend two main theses. First, I argue that Aristotle’s account of voluntary action focuses on the...
The subject of responsibility is undertaken by Aristotle from the perspective of the evaluation of t...
The article examines Aristotle�s two attempts to explain the phenomena of voluntary and involuntary ...
Although the most relevant analysis we can find among ancient philosophers regarding the problem of ...
In Nicomachean Ethics II 4 Aristotle famously raises a puzzle concerning moral habituation, and he s...
Voluntariness in Aristotle. Aristotle, by unifying the levels of soul and body in his theory of volu...
In his ethical treatises Aristotle offers a rich account of those conditions that render people’s be...
Starting from Donini’s work about the Aristotelian treatises of ethics, the paper proposes some refl...
The aim of this work is to analyse the conditions for moral responsibility to Aristotle and how thes...
Within the contemporary political-ethical debate, the Aristotelian ethics of virtue is frequently in...
Dans l'Éthique à Eudème, Aristote conduit une analyse des notions des eph'hemin, du volontaire et de...
The main problem studied here is the Aristotelian doctrine of the unity of virtues. Aristotle accept...
Aristotle was the first theoretician of voluntary ambiguity in the texts. He defined and illustrated...
In the Nicomachean ethics book II, Aristotle presents his well known doctrine of the mean (mesovth~)...
This article presents an account of the two criteria provided by Aristotle to separate voluntary act...
I defend two main theses. First, I argue that Aristotle’s account of voluntary action focuses on the...
The subject of responsibility is undertaken by Aristotle from the perspective of the evaluation of t...
The article examines Aristotle�s two attempts to explain the phenomena of voluntary and involuntary ...
Although the most relevant analysis we can find among ancient philosophers regarding the problem of ...
In Nicomachean Ethics II 4 Aristotle famously raises a puzzle concerning moral habituation, and he s...
Voluntariness in Aristotle. Aristotle, by unifying the levels of soul and body in his theory of volu...
In his ethical treatises Aristotle offers a rich account of those conditions that render people’s be...
Starting from Donini’s work about the Aristotelian treatises of ethics, the paper proposes some refl...
The aim of this work is to analyse the conditions for moral responsibility to Aristotle and how thes...
Within the contemporary political-ethical debate, the Aristotelian ethics of virtue is frequently in...