So Plato sees "the good" as what gives causality to ideas, and this is final cause in Aristotle. — Metaphysician Undercover
“I understand,” he said; “you’re talking about the things dealt with by geometrical studies [511B] and the arts akin to that.”
“Then understand me to mean the following by the other segment of the intelligible part: what rational speech itself gets hold of by its power of dialectical motion, making its presuppositions not sources but genuinely standing places, like steppingstones and springboards, in order that, by going up to what is presuppositionless at the source of everything and coming into contact with this, by following back again the things that follow from it, rational speech may descend in that way to a conclusion, [511C] making no more use in any way whatever of anything perceptible, but dealing with forms themselves, arriving at them by going through them, it ends at forms as well.”
“I understand,” he said, “though not sufficiently, because you seem to me to be talking about a tremendous amount of work; however, I understand that you want to mark off that part of what is and is intelligible that’s contemplated by the knowledge that comes from dialectical thinking as being clearer than what’s contemplated by what are called arts, which have presuppositions as their starting points. Those who contemplate things by means of the arts are forced to contemplate them by thinking and not by sense perception, but since they [511D] examine things not by going up to the source but on the basis of presuppositions, they seem to you to have no insight into them, even though, by means of their starting point, they’re dealing with things that are intelligible. And you seem to me to be calling the activity of geometers and such people thinking but not insight, on the grounds that thinking is something in between opinion and insight.” — Republic, Book 6, 511b translated by Joe Sachs
"we reach the conclusion that the good of man is an activity of the soul in conformity with excellence or virtue, and if there are several virtues, in conformity with the best and most complete."
"For it does not possess goodness in this part or that part but possesses the highest good in the whole, though it is distinct from it. It is this manner that Thinking is the thinking of Himself through all eternity."
In the passage from Book Lambda I cite above, the element of causality of what Aristotle finds to missing from Plato's good: " And those who posit the Forms also need a more authoritative principle; for why did things participate in the Forms or do so now? " — Paine
Pursuit of the good in this context is not an object or a goal in the way one says that the telos of making a chair is made actual when the plan for it has come into being. Learning what is real versus what is opinion is the activity being sought after. Aristotle speaks of telos as becoming what one was made to be, as quoted above: — Paine
In speaking of the good as a quality of creation as a whole, this language of telos for individual beings is exchanged for the outcome of the activity of the unmoved mover: — Paine
What are you talking about? There is no unstated premise in the distinction between seeing what you eat and eating what you see. Either you eat everything you see or you don't. — Fooloso4
For whatever that’s worth..... — Mww
It means a lot.Well, consider the source. Enough said. — Fooloso4
For Aristotle, perfection, or good, is a feature of the individual, in its fulfilment of its own particular form, which is unique to it, and only it, by the law of identity. — Metaphysician Undercover
For just as the goodness and performance of a flute player, a sculptor, or any kind of expert, and generally of anyone who fulfills some function or performs some action are thought to reside in his proper function, so the goodness and performance of man would seem to reside in whatever is his proper function.........we must make it clear that we mean a life determined by the activity (energeia) as opposed to the mere possession of the rational element. For the activity, it seems, has a greater claim on the function of man. — 1097b(Emphasis mine)
I don't understand this at all. You seem to be making "the good" into "the One" — Metaphysician Undercover
However, the term "good" is used in the categories of substance, of quality, and of relatedness alike; but a thing-as-such, i.e., a substance is by nature prior to a relation into which it can enter; relatedness is, as it were, an offshoot or logical accident of substance. Consequentially, there cannot be a Form common to the good-as-such and the good as a relation. — 1096a, 16
I would say that thinking in this sense is in the pursuit of a goal. — Metaphysician Undercover
And you seem to me to be calling the activity of geometers and such people thinking but not insight, on the grounds that thinking is something in between opinion and insight.”
Sorry Paine, I can't read the material for you. — Metaphysician Undercover
There is no difference between these unless it is specified either I see more than I eat, or I do not see more than I eat. — Metaphysician Undercover
Aristotle relates the telos of individuals to the fulfillment of their kind of being, as noted in the quote given above. I will add the passage that prefaces it for clarity: — Paine
On the contrary. Chapter 10 of Book Lamba of Metaphysics presents the good of the whole world as the relations between beings through the order imposed by the Mover. — Paine
However, the term "good" is used in the categories of substance, of quality, and of relatedness alike; but a thing-as-such, i.e., a substance is by nature prior to a relation into which it can enter; relatedness is, as it were, an offshoot or logical accident of substance. Consequentially, there cannot be a Form common to the good-as-such and the good as a relation. — 1096a, 16
A Venn diagram — Fooloso4
A Venn diagram with one circle being the things you pursue and the other circle being the things that are good shows that there is an area of overlap but also an area that does not overlap. They are not the same. — Fooloso4
It was a simple statement, not a Venn diagram. You're trying to alter the premise. — Metaphysician Undercover
It's easy to make a bold assertions like "every soul pursues the good some of the time, but not all of the time" — Metaphysician Undercover
Suppose for example a person is working on a good project and is therefore pursuing the good. — Metaphysician Undercover
But since the person is actively stealing, is the person pursuing the not good at the very same time that the person is pursuing the good? — Metaphysician Undercover
That is not the assertion. The assertion is the one you quote from Plato. The point is, the fact that you pursue something does not make it good. It is pursued because it is thought to be good, but pursuing something because you think it is good does not make it good. — Fooloso4
It is clear that things are not pursued because they are thought to be good, as "the good" escapes the grasp of reasonable thinking — Metaphysician Undercover
we do not think "X is good therefore I'll pursue it" — Metaphysician Undercover
No one goes willingly toward the bad or what he believes to be bad; neither is it in human nature, so it seems, to want to go toward what one believes to be bad instead of to the good. — Protagoras 358c
So, what defines something as "good" is the fact that it is pursued — Metaphysician Undercover
He rejects pleasure because obviously, some pleasures are bad — Metaphysician Undercover
Well then, by ignorance do you mean having a false opinion and being deceived about matters of importance? — 358c
Thinking something is good is not the same as grasping the good. Believing something is good is not the same as knowing it is good. — Fooloso4
Let's see what Plato's Socrates has to say about this:
No one goes willingly toward the bad or what he believes to be bad; neither is it in human nature, so it seems, to want to go toward what one believes to be bad instead of to the good.
— Protagoras 358c
As the quote from the dialogue Protagoras makes clear, it is what one believes to be good that one pursues and what one believes to be bad that one avoids. — Fooloso4
So, it cannot be what defines something as good is that it is pursued since we do pursue pleasure. — Fooloso4
A false opinion and being deceived about what is good leads one to pursue what is bad. Here we see the connection between knowledge and virtue. — Fooloso4
I keep asking you to justify this claim, but you do not. If there is some simple, clear and distinct principle, other than "thinking something is good", which makes the thing actually and truly good, then please produce it. — Metaphysician Undercover
He rejects pleasure because obviously, some pleasures are bad — Metaphysician Undercover
We often willingly do what we believe, and know to be bad. How is this possible? — Metaphysician Undercover
every act is inherently good. — Metaphysician Undercover
everything we do is good — Metaphysician Undercover
It is possible because we do not have a true understanding of "the good" — Metaphysician Undercover
So, what defines something as "good" is the fact that it is pursued, — Metaphysician Undercover
What is the case is that we really and truly do not know what "the good" is, — Metaphysician Undercover
Accordingly, your phrase "Knowledge of the good itself is that by which we can truly determine whether a particular act is good" makes no sense at all. — Metaphysician Undercover
The proper conclusion is that the belief that virtue is a knowledge is the deception. — Metaphysician Undercover
Virtue is the cause of knowledge — Metaphysician Undercover
My claim is that thinking or believing something is good is not the same as knowing that it is good. Thinking or believing something is good does not make the thing actually and truly good. — Fooloso4
You make the distinction yourself when you point out:
He rejects pleasure because obviously, some pleasures are bad
— Metaphysician Undercover
If we pursue pleasure and some pleasures are bad then pursuing pleasure does not make it good. — Fooloso4
You are now making the argument you rejected! If we willingly do what we believe, and know to be bad then what we are pursuing in such cases cannot, as you previously claimed, be good because we pursue it.
Previously you said:
every act is inherently good.
— Metaphysician Undercover
and:
everything we do is good
— Metaphysician Undercover
but now you admit that we often do what is bad. If every act is inherently good then how can an act that is inherently good be bad? — Fooloso4
You say:
It is possible because we do not have a true understanding of "the good"
— Metaphysician Undercover
How do you know that every act is good if we do not have a true understanding of the good?
So, what defines something as "good" is the fact that it is pursued,
— Metaphysician Undercover
A true understanding of the good cannot be that the good is whatever we pursue. You now say that we do not have a true understanding of the good: — Fooloso4
If it is not by knowledge that we can truly determine whether a particular act is good then in what way can we determine that it is good? Certainly not by the fact it is done. — Fooloso4
This is all hopeless twisted. — Fooloso4
That's why most people give up on trying to understand Plato — Metaphysician Undercover
we move ahead by solving the hopelessly twisted puzzles. — Metaphysician Undercover
Primary substance for Aristotle, as defined in his Categories, is the individual. So if the good is a quality of substance, it is attributed to the individual. — Metaphysician Undercover
It is also clear that the soul is the first substance, the body is the matter, and a man or an animal, universally taken, is a composite of the two; and 'Socrates' or 'Coriscus', if each term signifies also the soul of the individual, has two senses (for some say it is the soul that is the individual, others that it is the composite), but if it signifies simply this soul and this body, then such an individual term is like the corresponding universal term. — Metaphysics,1037a
Now, summing up what has been said about the soul, let us say again that the soul is in a way all existing things; for existing things are either objects of perception or object of thought, and knowledge is in a way the objects of knowledge and perception the objects of perception. — De Anima, 431b 20, translated by J.L Ackrill
Since [just as] in the whole of nature, there is something which is matter to each kind of thing (and this is what is potentially all of them), while on the other hand there is something else which is their cause and is productive of all of them---these being related as an art to its material---so there must also be these differences in the soul. And there is an intellect which is of this kind by becoming all things, and there is another which is so by producing all things, as a kind of disposition, like light does; for in a way light too makes colours which are potential in actual colours. And this intellect is distinct, unaffected, and unmixed, being in essence activity. — ibid, 430a 10
What you fail to see is that your hopelessly twisted puzzles are of your own making. This is true not only of your perverse reading of Plato but for your perverse reading of Wittgenstein as well. — Fooloso4
To argue that one's interlocutor has not studied enough is an abandonment of a thesis made upon its own merits. Admitting that one's arguments are useless is not exactly a clinic on how to do Platonic dialectic. — Paine
Rationality is of little use on the irrational. — Banno
I just wanted to observe that withdrawing from the discourse between two, as you observe, is not one of the possible moves within it. — Paine
On the basis of this reasoning, you seem to be denying that a relation between beings could ever go beyond the 'good' as the predicate of an individual being. — Paine
But I don't have to understand the thesis to notice it does not fit with other things Aristotle said. Aristotle discussed the good as a quality of the cosmic whole in Book Lambda, For the purpose of inquiring into first principles, the whole of creation is a substance that the Mover causes to exist, along with the order that comes into being through his rule. — Paine
The holistic view that connects the individual (and what is good for them) with the cosmos (the being that includes all beings) can be seen in the introduction of soul into the arguments made by Aristotle. The Categories make no mention of the idea of composite beings:
It is also clear that the soul is the first substance, the body is the matter, and a man or an animal, universally taken, is a composite of the two; and 'Socrates' or 'Coriscus', if each term signifies also the soul of the individual, has two senses (for some say it is the soul that is the individual, others that it is the composite), but if it signifies simply this soul and this body, then such an individual term is like the corresponding universal term.
— Metaphysics,1037a
The concept of soul is said to be central to the process of becoming an individual. With this starting principle it becomes related to the whole of creation:
Now, summing up what has been said about the soul, let us say again that the soul is in a way all existing things; for existing things are either objects of perception or object of thought, and knowledge is in a way the objects of knowledge and perception the objects of perception.
— De Anima, 431b 20, translated by J.L Ackrill
Aristotle bases this claim on linking the inquiry of all nature (fusis) to the existence of the soul:
Since [just as] in the whole of nature, there is something which is matter to each kind of thing (and this is what is potentially all of them), while on the other hand there is something else which is their cause and is productive of all of them---these being related as an art to its material---so there must also be these differences in the soul. And there is an intellect which is of this kind by becoming all things, and there is another which is so by producing all things, as a kind of disposition, like light does; for in a way light too makes colours which are potential in actual colours. And this intellect is distinct, unaffected, and unmixed, being in essence activity.
— ibid, 430a 10
This use of light as an analogy bears a strong resemblance to its use by Plato in Book 6 of the Republic, but reformulated in order to avoid the deficits Aristotle finds there. For the purpose of this present argument, the important point to realize is that the 'function of man' discussed in Nicomachean Ethics is not just a general predicate that can be applied to a set of individuals but relates to how those individuals come into being in a cosmos filled with these other beings. — Paine
This is a pointless paragraph. You know from the other thread that I reject Book Lambda as inconsistent with the rest of Aristotle's writing, and it is debatable whether it was actually written by him. — Metaphysician Undercover
Then "all things" is accidental. But you want to make "all things" essential, and conclude therefore that the good is a relation between the individual and the whole cosmos. — Metaphysician Undercover
You have yet to provide the support for this statement. I have seen some commentary regarding this topic in various writings but you have not attempted to do more than claim it to be true. In any case, the argument in De Anima replicates the same view given in Book Lambda. — Paine
On the contrary, there is vast difference between the 'good' as it relates to the whole of the cosmos and the problems of individual beings. But I am not the one claiming there is no 'overarching' good. It seems absurd to assert that Aristotle intended to separate the two goods as a category mistake in the way you seem to be arguing for. — Paine
I can't see the point you are making here, Paine. Aristotle clearly says that thoughts are dependent on images. It's at the end of your quote. And images are derived from the senses. So we have no basis for a "nous" which is independent of the senses, sense organs, and material body. It's true that Aristotle, at some points alludes to the appearance of a separate, independent mind, but such a thing is inconsistent with the principles he clearly states. — Metaphysician Undercover
...it is always logically possible that the inconsistency belongs to your interpretation. — Paine
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