Although Aristotle stated that we do not deliberate about ends, it is widely agreed that he did not mean it. Eager to save him from implying that ends are irrational, scholars have argued that he did recognize deliberation about the specification of ends. This claim misunderstands Aristotle’s conceptions of both deliberation and ends. Deliberation is not the whole of reasoning: it is a subcategory concerning only practical matters within our power. Not deliberating about something thus does not preclude other forms of reflection on it, such as that involved in specification. Yet on Aristotle’s view, our ends are not in our power. They are generated not by individual choice but by nature, which in the case of human beings includes roles for ...
Resumen: El presente texto explora en las obras seleccionadas de Aristóteles la conexión del deliber...
I argue that Aristotle does not believe all rational action aims at securing eudaimonia (happiness) ...
I argue that Aristotle does not believe all rational action aims at securing eudaimonia (happiness) ...
This dissertation argues that: (1) deliberation (bouleusis) is distinguished from theoretical thoug...
Conflicts between virtues would not result in the radical incommensurability described by Wiggins (h...
The author discusses Aristotle’s notion of deliberation and shows that it differs considerably from ...
The article discusses relationships and contexts for "reason", "knowledge", and virtue in Aristotle,...
Many scholars view Aristotle as the source of the particularist position in modern ethics – the view...
In this chapter we will address the relationship between truth and deliberation in Aristotle from th...
Booko synopsis: Both Aristotle and moral psychology have been flourishing areas of philosophical inq...
“The subject of Aristotle\u27s Nicomachean Ethics is desires and their ends, and at the center of th...
This chapter discusses Aristotle’s puzzling claim that ‘craft does not deliberate’ (Physics II.8). T...
In Aristotle’s writings, there is a current relationship between investigation and deliberation. Thi...
Deliberation is a basic rational human activity recognized since ancient times due to its role in de...
This thesis defends the view that, for Aristotle, perception is a mode of cognition capable of grasp...
Resumen: El presente texto explora en las obras seleccionadas de Aristóteles la conexión del deliber...
I argue that Aristotle does not believe all rational action aims at securing eudaimonia (happiness) ...
I argue that Aristotle does not believe all rational action aims at securing eudaimonia (happiness) ...
This dissertation argues that: (1) deliberation (bouleusis) is distinguished from theoretical thoug...
Conflicts between virtues would not result in the radical incommensurability described by Wiggins (h...
The author discusses Aristotle’s notion of deliberation and shows that it differs considerably from ...
The article discusses relationships and contexts for "reason", "knowledge", and virtue in Aristotle,...
Many scholars view Aristotle as the source of the particularist position in modern ethics – the view...
In this chapter we will address the relationship between truth and deliberation in Aristotle from th...
Booko synopsis: Both Aristotle and moral psychology have been flourishing areas of philosophical inq...
“The subject of Aristotle\u27s Nicomachean Ethics is desires and their ends, and at the center of th...
This chapter discusses Aristotle’s puzzling claim that ‘craft does not deliberate’ (Physics II.8). T...
In Aristotle’s writings, there is a current relationship between investigation and deliberation. Thi...
Deliberation is a basic rational human activity recognized since ancient times due to its role in de...
This thesis defends the view that, for Aristotle, perception is a mode of cognition capable of grasp...
Resumen: El presente texto explora en las obras seleccionadas de Aristóteles la conexión del deliber...
I argue that Aristotle does not believe all rational action aims at securing eudaimonia (happiness) ...
I argue that Aristotle does not believe all rational action aims at securing eudaimonia (happiness) ...