Recent debates have examined again whether the concept of individual natural "fights" is significant for Aristotle's political philosophy and ethics. Fred D. Miller's Nature, Justice, and Rights in Aristotle's Politics is the most sustained recent attempt to argue that Aristotle's Politics is centrally concerned with the issue of individual fights based on nature and that no anachronism is involved in arguing this. (1) Aristotle's Politics, it is argued, should thus be seen as the precursor of later theories of individual rights, although it would be a mistake to infer ..
Proclaiming that man is a political animal, Aristotle overcame the Sophists' opposition between law ...
This paper examines Aristotle’s two famous claims that man is by nature a political animal, and that...
The aim of the article is to indicate that there is quite strong support in the text of the Nicomach...
Aristotle's primary perspective on the concept of justice is founded on knowledge of the good, which...
In the center of the fifth book of the Nicomachean Ethics, Aristotle elliptically characterizes poli...
While the idea of attributing a natural rights component to Aristotle\u27s philosophy is indeed anac...
Nowhere in the works of what is called Aristotle is there a discussion of anything named Natural Law...
In the Politics, Aristotle claims that a distinctive feature of civic relations is that citizens are...
The treatise on justice in Nicomachean Ethics 5 reports that the 6th C. sage Bias claimed that “ruli...
Part of a Festschrift for Fred Miller, this essay reconsiders Miller's interpretation of Aristotle i...
Aristotle states that although political regimes vary from place to place, only one is by nature the...
I argue that Aristotle could not be a fore-runner to liberalism, because his view of humanity is tha...
Thesis advisor: Robert C. BartlettAt the beginning of the fifth book of the Nicomachean Ethics, Aris...
"Connecting several strands of Aristotle's thought, Zoli Filotas sheds light on one of the axioms of...
According to the terms of Aristotle\u27s Politics, to be alive is to instantiate a form of rule. In ...
Proclaiming that man is a political animal, Aristotle overcame the Sophists' opposition between law ...
This paper examines Aristotle’s two famous claims that man is by nature a political animal, and that...
The aim of the article is to indicate that there is quite strong support in the text of the Nicomach...
Aristotle's primary perspective on the concept of justice is founded on knowledge of the good, which...
In the center of the fifth book of the Nicomachean Ethics, Aristotle elliptically characterizes poli...
While the idea of attributing a natural rights component to Aristotle\u27s philosophy is indeed anac...
Nowhere in the works of what is called Aristotle is there a discussion of anything named Natural Law...
In the Politics, Aristotle claims that a distinctive feature of civic relations is that citizens are...
The treatise on justice in Nicomachean Ethics 5 reports that the 6th C. sage Bias claimed that “ruli...
Part of a Festschrift for Fred Miller, this essay reconsiders Miller's interpretation of Aristotle i...
Aristotle states that although political regimes vary from place to place, only one is by nature the...
I argue that Aristotle could not be a fore-runner to liberalism, because his view of humanity is tha...
Thesis advisor: Robert C. BartlettAt the beginning of the fifth book of the Nicomachean Ethics, Aris...
"Connecting several strands of Aristotle's thought, Zoli Filotas sheds light on one of the axioms of...
According to the terms of Aristotle\u27s Politics, to be alive is to instantiate a form of rule. In ...
Proclaiming that man is a political animal, Aristotle overcame the Sophists' opposition between law ...
This paper examines Aristotle’s two famous claims that man is by nature a political animal, and that...
The aim of the article is to indicate that there is quite strong support in the text of the Nicomach...