Book No. –  4 (Political Science)

Book Name Western Political Thought (Shefali Jha)

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1. A THEORY OF MORAL ACTION

2. FROM MORAL THEORY TO POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY

3. THE POLITY AND ARISTOTLE’S CLASSIFICATION OF CONSTITUTIONS

4. ARISTOTELIAN TELEOLOGY

5. PROBLEMS IN ARISTOTLE’S POLITICAL THEORY

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Aristotle (384–322 BCE): Moral Action and the Best Constitution

Chapter – 3

Table of Contents
  • The choice between being a Platonist or an Aristotelian is particularly challenging in political philosophy.
  • Plato’s principle of combining philosophy with politics leads to an anti-democratic regime; however, Aristotle’s belief in natural hierarchies and exclusion of slaves and women complicates his view of political rule.
  • Aristotle, a Macedonian born in Stagira, was Plato’s faithful student at the Academy until Plato’s death in 347 BCE.
  • Aristotle was not an Athenian and had early interests in medical and biological studies. His father was a physician and served the king of Macedon.
  • Aristotle had personal ties with Philip of Macedon and tutored his son, Alexander, for several years.
  • In 367 BCE, Aristotle moved to Athens and studied under Plato. After Plato’s death, he left the Academy due to a leadership change.
  • After some time in Asia Minor, Aristotle became Alexander’s tutor in 342–336 BCE and returned to Athens in 335 BCE to establish his own school, the Lyceum.
  • After Alexander’s death, Aristotle fled Athens in 323 BCE due to rebellion against Macedon and died in exile in 322 BCE.
  • Aristotle was a prolific writer, producing works like Metaphysics, Physics, Rhetoric, Poetics, Politics, and Nicomachean Ethics.
  • Neo-Platonism dominated philosophy during the Middle Ages, leading to the suppression of Aristotle’s works, except for some logic texts.
  • Aristotle’s works were lost to the Western tradition until translations into Latin in the 12th–13th centuries.
  • Ibn Sina and Ibn Rushd, Arab scholars, played a key role in preserving and translating Aristotle’s works into Latin.
  • Aristotle’s early works, like Protrepticus, showed Plato’s influence, but his differences with Plato became clearer over time.
  • Aristotle rejected Plato’s method of seeking truth in the Forms and emphasized investigating appearances (phainomena) and beliefs (endoxa) from everyday life.
  • While Plato dismissed sense perception and shared language, Aristotle believed truth could be found in appearances, reconciling contradictions through proper investigation.
  • Aristotle’s method was empirical, collecting data on 158 constitutions of his time, though only the Athenian Constitution survives.
  • He used these empirical observations to write Politics, a treatise on political science, reflecting his respect for practical knowledge and Athenian social practices.
  • In Nicomachean Ethics, Aristotle’s moral theory contrasts with Plato’s, and in Book II of Politics, he spends the first six chapters criticizing Plato’s theories in Republic and Laws.

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