欢迎来到麦多课文档分享! | 帮助中心 海量文档,免费浏览,给你所需,享你所想!
麦多课文档分享
全部分类
  • 标准规范>
  • 教学课件>
  • 考试资料>
  • 办公文档>
  • 学术论文>
  • 行业资料>
  • 易语言源码>
  • ImageVerifierCode 换一换
    首页 麦多课文档分享 > 资源分类 > PPT文档下载
    分享到微信 分享到微博 分享到QQ空间

    Aristotle doctrine that Man is by Nature a Zōon Politikon.ppt

    • 资源ID:378564       资源大小:45.50KB        全文页数:16页
    • 资源格式: PPT        下载积分:2000积分
    快捷下载 游客一键下载
    账号登录下载
    微信登录下载
    二维码
    微信扫一扫登录
    下载资源需要2000积分(如需开发票,请勿充值!)
    邮箱/手机:
    温馨提示:
    如需开发票,请勿充值!快捷下载时,用户名和密码都是您填写的邮箱或者手机号,方便查询和重复下载(系统自动生成)。
    如需开发票,请勿充值!如填写123,账号就是123,密码也是123。
    支付方式: 支付宝扫码支付    微信扫码支付   
    验证码:   换一换

    加入VIP,交流精品资源
     
    账号:
    密码:
    验证码:   换一换
      忘记密码?
        
    友情提示
    2、PDF文件下载后,可能会被浏览器默认打开,此种情况可以点击浏览器菜单,保存网页到桌面,就可以正常下载了。
    3、本站不支持迅雷下载,请使用电脑自带的IE浏览器,或者360浏览器、谷歌浏览器下载即可。
    4、本站资源下载后的文档和图纸-无水印,预览文档经过压缩,下载后原文更清晰。
    5、试题试卷类文档,如果标题没有明确说明有答案则都视为没有答案,请知晓。

    Aristotle doctrine that Man is by Nature a Zōon Politikon.ppt

    1、Aristotle doctrine that “Man is by Nature a Zon Politikon”,a) Richard Mulgan, Aristotles Political Theory chs. 1&2. b) Bernard Yack, Community and Conflict. pp. 92-103. c) Wolfgang Kullman, Man as a Political Animal in Keyt and Miller. d) Hannah Arendt, The Human Condition 7-37.Aristotle - 1253a1-15

    2、.,1. Zon transliterated as zon includes all living beings, men, animals and Gods. Some common mistakes even by famous philosophers: A. Giorgio Agamben in Homo Sacer argues that Aristotle conceives of human animal life this sense (zo), and distinguishes it from mans political and ethical life (bios).

    3、 Agamben interprets (zo), as “simple natural life” la semplice vita naturale and explains that this kind of life “mere living was excluded from the polis and confined to the oikos or household, which was a sphere concerned exclusively with reproduction riproduzione and subsistence sussistenza. This

    4、is the meaning he subsequently assigns to “bare life” la nuda vita.,Zon = mans natural existence, or the social existence of the polis existence “by nature” where this expression does not refer to (but specifically) excludes the teleological meaning of nature.The instinctual basis of the polis desir

    5、e for companionship.The metaphysical/reproductive basis of the polis.The drive for self-preservation.The economic and material basis of the polis.,B. Martin Heidegger interprets the phrase “politikon zon” as a reference to mans animal existence.Martin Heidegger, On Humanism, 1949, p13“We must be cle

    6、ar that human beings in the final analysis are enclosed in the sphere of animal being (animalitas), even if he is not equated with beasts, but is given a specific difference. In principle one must always think of the homo animalisthis positioning is a kind of metaphysics.”So Heidegger thinks that ma

    7、ns status as a zon, marks him out as an animal.,However, zon/z is not a pejorative designation. It means “ensouled being” or “living being” in a wide and non-pejorative sense, which excludes only plants, but includes animals and Gods. (Animal by contrast, in the Roman and Christian traditions is pej

    8、orative.) C. As Hans Jonas puts it “does not mean animal ( = bestia), but every ensouled (= living) being, excluding plants but including demons, Gods, ensouled stars, indeed the ensouled universe as the greatest and most perfect living being itself.” (Hans Jonas, Zwischen Nichts und Ewigkeit. Zur L

    9、ehre vom Menachen cited in Gnther Bien, Die Grundlegung der Politischen Philosophie bei Aristoteles, Freiburg, Karl Alber, 1973, p. 123.),Remember the sphere of human existence or properly human affairs in which politics and ethics have their proper place, like human existence itself, is demarcated

    10、from above and from below, suspended between the divine (the life of the Gods and the heavenly bodies) and the animal.So Aristotle means it literally when he says that “he who is by nature and not by luck without a polis is either a bad man, or above all men.” 1252a3Humans as living beings share som

    11、e features of their existence with animals/beasts, and some with Gods.,PolitikonIt is commonly claimed that Aristotle define the human beings as a Zon Politikon.Lets take some famous examples.A. Michel Foucault, History of Sexuality vol. III, p. 188“Ever since Aristotle defined man as a “political a

    12、nimal” modern man is an animal whose politics calls his existence as a living being into question.”,B. Hannah Arendt“Aristotles definition of man as a zon politikon was not only unrelated and even opposed to the natural association experienced in household life; it can be fully understood only if on

    13、e adds his second famous definition of man as a zon logon ekhon.” Hannah Arendt, The Human Condition, Chicago, 1954, p. 27N.B. The only opposition here is that the life of citizens “sharing in the constitution” that is “ruling and being ruled in turn” and hence participating in a just political orde

    14、r, is opposed to the natural hierarchies of the household master/(natural) slave, and man woman, which are based on instinct, affection and exist for the purpose of survival and economic and material need.,Aristotle is not claiming that the social glue that cements the family plays not role in cemen

    15、ting the political community. He claims that it is necessary but not sufficient to do this, in addition to all this one needs a constitution, laws, a just political order.There is no opposition as such between the bases of natural association (that are sufficient for family ties) and the bases of po

    16、litical order.,Still Arendt implies that Aristotle has several definitions of man/human being/ and she is right about this.Aristotle offers lots of other much better candidate definitions of man.Man is the only animal who can speak. Man is the only animal who can deliberate and decide. Man is the on

    17、ly animal who can act. Man is the only animal who can count. Man is the only animal who can remember. Man is the only animal who can do science.,In his biological writings, Aristotle notes that there are several different kinds of political animal. In History of the Animals he distinguishes between

    18、gregarious animals tn angelain and solitary animals tn monadikn. Some gregarious animals, (not those that herd or flock together or swim together in shoals) are political animals“Animals that live politically are those that have any kind of activity in common, which is not true of all gregarious ani

    19、mals. Of this sort are: man, bee, wasp and crane.” Aristotle, (HA 1.1. 487 b33ff)Political as a biological attribute and differentium of a small sub-class of gregarious animals, including human beings but not limited to them.,Look again at Aristotles supposed definition of man in Book I of The Polit

    20、ics:It is clear that man is a political animal more than any bee or any gregarious animal. Aristotle, (Politics, 1253a7 my emphasis.The specific difference that determines the genus of political animals, insofar as Aristotle canvasses one, is that human beings have logos.2 Aristotles claims that “ma

    21、n is the only animal who has speech/reason” logon de monon anthrpos ekhei tn zn (1253a9). Man is thE only animal with a sense of justice. (See also 1334b15 where Aristotle claims that both reason logos and intellection nous are the end toward which nature strives mintes phuses telos, so that birth a

    22、nd education in customs should be ordered with a view to them.),“speechserves to make clear what is beneficial and what is harmful, and so also what is just and unjust. For by contrast with the other animals ta alla za he alone can perceive what is good and bad, and just and unjust) Politics (1251a1

    23、6-19) See also Politics 1332b5. Man and man alone has reason monos gar echei logon. “the virtue of justice dikaiosun is what is political, and justice dik is the basis on which the political association is ordered, and the virtue of justice is a judgement about what is just”. (1253a33-5),Mulgan vers

    24、us Kullmann Richard Mulgan. p. 24 1. The political animal, in the narrow sense, means the polis-animal. Mulgan claims this is its “literal” meaning. 2. Aristotle uses the term in the wider sense of social animal to denote “any species which co-operates in a common enterprise.” Calls this its metapho

    25、rical meaning. 3. Aristotle unsuccessfully tries to align both meanings at 1253 a1-15 with the claim that “man is more of a political animal than a bee or any other gregarious animal.” What he should have said is that other animals in a metaphorical sense only whereas man is political in a literal s

    26、ense too.,4. Mulgan suggests that the proposition, “Man is a political animal is a premise, which “is to be used to prove that the polis is natural.” p.24. The mistake he diagnoses is that Aristotle only shows the biological basis of mans social nature, not “that this society and state must be of th

    27、e polis-type.” Mulgan, p.25. Look at the text. The proposition is presented not as the premise but as a conclusion of argument, which shows first, that the polis exists by nature, and that man is a political animal. “Hence it clearly follows that the state exists by nature, and that man is a political animal.” 1253a1 5. Mulgan: In order to do this Aristotle has to make ”unwarranted claims of biological universality for values which are, at least in part, peculiar to one social context.” p. 25,


    注意事项

    本文(Aristotle doctrine that Man is by Nature a Zōon Politikon.ppt)为本站会员(cleanass300)主动上传,麦多课文档分享仅提供信息存储空间,仅对用户上传内容的表现方式做保护处理,对上载内容本身不做任何修改或编辑。 若此文所含内容侵犯了您的版权或隐私,请立即通知麦多课文档分享(点击联系客服),我们立即给予删除!




    关于我们 - 网站声明 - 网站地图 - 资源地图 - 友情链接 - 网站客服 - 联系我们

    copyright@ 2008-2019 麦多课文库(www.mydoc123.com)网站版权所有
    备案/许可证编号:苏ICP备17064731号-1 

    收起
    展开