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many feel thus has many friends; if these are worthy men, he has good
friends.
‘Good luck’ means the acquisition or possession of all or most, or the most
important, of those good things which are due to luck. Some of the things that
are due to luck may also be due to artificial contrivance; but many are
independent of art, as for example those which are due to nature-though, to be
sure, things due to luck may actually be contrary to nature. Thus health may
be due to artificial contrivance, but beauty and stature are due to nature. All
such good things as excite envy are, as a class, the outcome of good luck.
Luck is also the cause of good things that happen contrary to reasonable
expectation: as when, for instance, all your brothers are ugly, but you are
handsome yourself; or when you find a treasure that everybody else has
overlooked; or when a missile hits the next man and misses you; or when you
are the only man not to go to a place you have gone to regularly, while the
others go there for the first time and are killed. All such things are reckoned
pieces of good luck.
As to virtue, it is most closely connected with the subject of Eulogy, and
therefore we will wait to define it until we come to discuss that subject.
6
It is now plain what our aims, future or actual, should be in urging, and
what in depreciating, a proposal; the latter being the opposite of the former.
Now the political or deliberative orator’s aim is utility: deliberation seeks to
determine not ends but the means to ends, i.e. what it is most useful to do.
Further, utility is a good thing. We ought therefore to assure ourselves of the
main facts about Goodness and Utility in general.
We may define a good thing as that which ought to be chosen for its own
sake; or as that for the sake of which we choose something else; or as that
which is sought after by all things, or by all things that have sensation or
reason, or which will be sought after by any things that acquire reason; or as
that which must be prescribed for a given individual by reason generally, or is
prescribed for him by his individual reason, this being his individual good; or
as that whose presence brings anything into a satisfactory and self-sufficing
condition; or as self-sufficiency; or as what produces, maintains, or entails
characteristics of this kind, while preventing and destroying their opposites.
One thing may entail another in either of two ways-(1) simultaneously, (2)
subsequently. Thus learning entails knowledge subsequently, health entails
life simultaneously. Things are productive of other things in three senses: first
as being healthy produces health; secondly, as food produces health; and
2173
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Buch The Complete Aristotle"
The Complete Aristotle
- Titel
- The Complete Aristotle
- Autor
- Aristotle
- Datum
- ~322 B.C.
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- PD
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 2328
- Schlagwörter
- Philosophy, Antique, Philosophie, Antike, Dialogues, Metaphysik, Metaphysics, Ideologie, Ideology, Englisch
- Kategorien
- Geisteswissenschaften
- International
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- Part 1; Logic (Organon) 3
- Categories 4
- On Interpretation 34
- Prior Analytics, Book I 56
- Prior Analytics, Book II 113
- Posterior Analytics, Book I 149
- Posterior Analytics, Book II 193
- Topics, Book I 218
- Topics, Book II 221
- Topics, Book III 237
- Topics, Book IV 248
- Topics, Book V 266
- Topics, Book VI 291
- Topics, Book VII 317
- Topics, Book VIII 326
- On Sophistical Refutations 348
- Part 2; Universal Physics 396
- Physics, Book I 397
- Physics, Book II 415
- Physics, Book III 432
- Physics, Book IV 449
- Physics, Book V 481
- Physics, Book VI 496
- Physics, Book VII 519
- Physics, Book VIII 533
- On the Heavens, Book I 570
- On the Heavens, Book II 599
- On the Heavens, Book III 624
- On the Heavens, Book IV 640
- On Generation and Corruption, Book I 651
- On Generation and Corruption, Book II 685
- Meteorology, Book I 707
- Meteorology, Book II 733
- Meteorology, Book III 760
- Meteorology, Book IV 773
- Part 3; Human Physics 795
- On the Soul, Book I 796
- On the Soul, Book II 815
- On the Soul, Book III 840
- On Sense and the Sensible 861
- On Memory and Reminiscence 889
- On Sleep and Sleeplessness 899
- On Dreams 909
- On Prophesying by Dreams 918
- On Longevity and the Shortness of Life 923
- On Youth, Old Age, Life and Death, and Respiration 929
- Part 4; Animal Physics 952
- The History of Animals, Book I 953
- The History of Animals, Book II translated 977
- The History of Animals, Book III 1000
- The History of Animals, Book IV 1029
- The History of Animals, Book V 1056
- The History of Animals, Book VI 1094
- The History of Animals, Book VII 1135
- The History of Animals, Book VIII 1150
- The History of Animals, Book IX 1186
- On the Parts of Animals, Book I 1234
- On the Parts of Animals, Book II 1249
- On the Parts of Animals, Book III 1281
- On the Parts of Animals, Book IV 1311
- On the Motion of Animals 1351
- On the Gait of Animals 1363
- On the Generation of Animals, Book I 1381
- On the Generation of Animals, Book II 1412
- On the Generation of Animals, Book III 1444
- On the Generation of Animals, Book IV 1469
- On the Generation of Animals, Book V 1496
- Part 5; Metaphysics 1516
- Part 6; Ethics and Politics 1748
- Nicomachean Ethics, Book I 1749
- Nicomachean Ethics, Book II 1766
- Nicomachean Ethics, Book III 1779
- Nicomachean Ethics, Book IV 1799
- Nicomachean Ethics, Book V 1817
- Nicomachean Ethics, Book VI 1836
- Nicomachean Ethics, Book VII 1851
- Nicomachean Ethics, Book VIII 1872
- Nicomachean Ethics, Book IX 1890
- Nicomachean Ethics, Book X 1907
- Politics, Book I 1925
- Politics, Book II 1943
- Politics, Book III 1970
- Politics, Book IV 1997
- Politics, Book V 2023
- Politics, Book VI 2053
- Politics, Book VII 2065
- Politics, Book VIII 2091
- The Athenian Constitution 2102
- Part 7; Aesthetic Writings 2156