Book X
1
After these matters we ought perhaps next
to discuss pleasure. For it is thought to
be most intimately connected with our human
nature, which is the reason why in educating
the young we steer them by the rudders of
pleasure and pain; it is thought, too, that
to enjoy the things we ought and to hate
the things we ought has the greatest bearing
on virtue of character. For these things
extend right through life, with a weight
and power of their own in respect both to
virtue and to the happy life, since men choose
what is pleasant and avoid what is painful;
and such things, it will be thought, we should
least of all omit to discuss, especially
since they admit of much dispute. For some
say pleasure is the good, while others, on
the contrary, say it is thoroughly bad-some
no doubt being persuaded that the facts are
so, and others thinking it has a better effect
on our life to exhibit pleasure as a bad
thing even if it is not; for most people
(they think) incline towards it and are the
slaves of their pleasures, for which reason
they ought to lead them in the opposite direction,
since thus they will reach the middle state.
But surely this is not correct. For arguments
about matters concerned with feelings and
actions are less reliable than facts: and
so when they clash with the facts of perception
they are despised, and discredit the truth
as well; if a man who runs down pleasure
is once seen to be alming at it, his inclining
towards it is thought to imply that it is
all worthy of being aimed at; for most people
are not good at drawing distinctions. True
arguments seem, then, most useful, not only
with a view to knowledge, but with a view
to life also; for since they harmonize with
the facts they are believed, and so they
stimulate those who understand them to live
according to them.-Enough of such questions;
let us proceed to review the opinions that
have been expressed about pleasure.
2
Eudoxus thought pleasure was the good because
he saw all things, both rational and irrational,
aiming at it, and because in all things that
which is the object of choice is what is
excellent, and that which is most the object
of choice the greatest good; thus the fact
that all things moved towards the same object
indicated that this was for all things the
chief good (for each thing, he argued, finds
its own good, as it finds its own nourishment);
and that which is good for all things and
at which all aim was the good. His arguments
were credited more because of the excellence
of his character than for their own sake;
he was thought to be remarkably self-controlled,
and therefore it was thought that he was
not saying what he did say as a friend of
pleasure, but that the facts really were
so. He believed that the same conclusion
followed no less plainly from a study of
the contrary of pleasure; pain was in itself
an object of aversion to all things, and
therefore its contrary must be similarly
an object of choice. And again that is most
an object of choice which we choose not because
or for the sake of something else, and pleasure
is admittedly of this nature; for no one
asks to what end he is pleased, thus implying
that pleasure is in itself an object of choice.
Further, he argued that pleasure when added
to any good, e. g. to just or temperate action,
makes it more worthy of choice, and that
it is only by itself that the good can be
increased.
This argument seems to show it to be one
of the goods, and no more a good than any
other; for every good is more worthy of choice
along with another good than taken alone.
And so it is by an argument of this kind
that Plato proves the good not to be pleasure;
he argues that the pleasant life is more
desirable with wisdom than without, and that
if the mixture is better, pleasure is not
the good; for the good cannot become more
desirable by the addition of anything to
it. Now it is clear that nothing else, any
more than pleasure, can be the good if it
is made more desirable by the addition of
any of the things that are good in themselves.
What, then, is there that satisfies this
criterion, which at the same time we can
participate in? It is something of this sort
that we are looking for. Those who object
that that at which all things aim is not
necessarily good are, we may surmise, talking
nonsense. For we say that that which every
one thinks really is so; and the man who
attacks this belief will hardly have anything
more credible to maintain instead. If it
is senseless creatures that desire the things
in question, there might be something in
what they say; but if intelligent creatures
do so as well, what sense can there be in
this view? But perhaps even in inferior creatures
there is some natural good stronger than
themselves which aims at their proper good.
Nor does the argument about the contrary
of pleasure seem to be correct. They say
that if pain is an evil it does not follow
that pleasure is a good; for evil is opposed
to evil and at the same time both are opposed
to the neutral state-which is correct enough
but does not apply to the things in question.
For if both pleasure and pain belonged to
the class of evils they ought both to be
objects of aversion, while if they belonged
to the class of neutrals neither should be
an object of aversion or they should both
be equally so; but in fact people evidently
avoid the one as evil and choose the other
as good; that then must be the nature of
the opposition between them.
3
Nor again, if pleasure is not a quality,
does it follow that it is not a good; for
the activities of virtue are not qualities
either, nor is happiness. They say, however,
that the good is determinate, while pleasure
is indeterminate, because it admits of degrees.
Now if it is from the feeling of pleasure
that they judge thus, the same will be true
of justice and the other virtues, in respect
of which we plainly say that people of a
certain character are so more or less, and
act more or less in accordance with these
virtues; for people may be more just or brave,
and it is possible also to act justly or
temperately more or less. But if their judgement
is based on the various pleasures, surely
they are not stating the real cause, if in
fact some pleasures are unmixed and others
mixed. Again, just as health admits of degrees
without being indeterminate, why should not
pleasure? The same proportion is not found
in all things, nor a single proportion always
in the same thing, but it may be relaxed
and yet persist up to a point, and it may
differ in degree. The case of pleasure also
may therefore be of this kind.
Again, they assume that the good is perfect
while movements and comings into being are
imperfect, and try to exhibit pleasure as
being a movement and a coming into being.
But they do not seem to be right even in
saying that it is a movement. For speed and
slowness are thought to be proper to every
movement, and if a movement, e. g. that of
the heavens, has not speed or slowness in
itself, it has it in relation to something
else; but of pleasure neither of these things
is true. For while we may become pleased
quickly as we may become angry quickly, we
cannot be pleased quickly, not even in relation
to some one else, while we can walk, or grow,
or the like, quickly. While, then, we can
change quickly or slowly into a state of
pleasure, we cannot quickly exhibit the activity
of pleasure, i. e. be pleased. Again, how
can it be a coming into being? It is not
thought that any chance thing can come out
of any chance thing, but that a thing is
dissolved into that out of which it comes
into being; and pain would be the destruction
of that of which pleasure is the coming into
being.
They say, too, that pain is the lack of that
which is according to nature, and pleasure
is replenishment. But these experiences are
bodily. If then pleasure is replenishment
with that which is according to nature, that
which feels pleasure will be that in which
the replenishment takes place, i. e. the
body; but that is not thought to be the case;
therefore the replenishment is not pleasure,
though one would be pleased when replenishment
was taking place, just as one would be pained
if one was being operated on. This opinion
seems to be based on the pains and pleasures
connected with nutrition; on the fact that
when people have been short of food and have
felt pain beforehand they are pleased by
the replenishment. But this does not happen
with all pleasures; for the pleasures of
learning and, among the sensuous pleasures,
those of smell, and also many sounds and
sights, and memories and hopes, do not presuppose
pain. Of what then will these be the coming
into being? There has not been lack of anything
of which they could be the supplying anew.
In reply to those who bring forward the disgraceful
pleasures one may say that these are not
pleasant; if things are pleasant to people
of vicious constitution, we must not suppose
that they are also pleasant to others than
these, just as we do not reason so about
the things that are wholesome or sweet or
bitter to sick people, or ascribe whiteness
to the things that seem white to those suffering
from a disease of the eye. Or one might answer
thus-that the pleasures are desirable, but
not from these sources, as wealth is desirable,
but not as the reward of betrayal, and health,
but not at the cost of eating anything and
everything. Or perhaps pleasures differ in
kind; for those derived from noble sources
are different from those derived from base
sources, and one cannot the pleasure of the
just man without being just, nor that of
the musical man without being musical, and
so on.
The fact, too, that a friend is different
from a flatterer seems to make it plain that
pleasure is not a good or that pleasures
are different in kind; for the one is thought
to consort with us with a view to the good,
the other with a view to our pleasure, and
the one is reproached for his conduct while
the other is praised on the ground that he
consorts with us for different ends. And
no one would choose to live with the intellect
of a child throughout his life, however much
he were to be pleased at the things that
children are pleased at, nor to get enjoyment
by doing some most disgraceful deed, though
he were never to feel any pain in consequence.
And there are many things we should be keen
about even if they brought no pleasure, e.
g. seeing, remembering, knowing, possessing
the virtues. If pleasures necessarily do
accompany these, that makes no odds; we should
choose these even if no pleasure resulted.
It seems to be clear, then, that neither
is pleasure the good nor is all pleasure
desirable, and that some pleasures are desirable
in themselves, differing in kind or in their
sources from the others. So much for the
things that are said about pleasure and pain.
4
What pleasure is, or what kind of thing it
is, will become plainer if we take up the
question aga from the beginning. Seeing seems
to be at any moment complete, for it does
not lack anything which coming into being
later will complete its form; and pleasure
also seems to be of this nature. For it is
a whole, and at no time can one find a pleasure
whose form will be completed if the pleasure
lasts longer. For this reason, too, it is
not a movement. For every movement (e. g.
that of building) takes time and is for the
sake of an end, and is complete when it has
made what it aims at. It is complete, therefore,
only in the whole time or at that final moment.
In their parts and during the time they occupy,
all movements are incomplete, and are different
in kind from the whole movement and from
each other. For the fitting together of the
stones is different from the fluting of the
column, and these are both different from
the making of the temple; and the making
of the temple is complete (for it lacks nothing
with a view to the end proposed), but the
making of the base or of the triglyph is
incomplete; for each is the making of only
a part. They differ in kind, then, and it
is not possible to find at any and every
time a movement complete in form, but if
at all, only in the whole time. So, too,
in the case of walking and all other movements.
For if locomotion is a movement from to there,
it, too, has differences in kind-flying,
walking, leaping, and so on. And not only
so, but in walking itself there are such
differences; for the whence and whither are
not the same in the whole racecourse and
in a part of it, nor in one part and in another,
nor is it the same thing to traverse this
line and that; for one traverses not only
a line but one which is in a place, and this
one is in a different place from that. We
have discussed movement with precision in
another work, but it seems that it is not
complete at any and every time, but that
the many movements are incomplete and different
in kind, since the whence and whither give
them their form. But of pleasure the form
is complete at any and every time. Plainly,
then, pleasure and movement must be different
from each other, and pleasure must be one
of the things that are whole and complete.
This would seem to be the case, too, from
the fact that it is not possible to move
otherwise than in time, but it is possible
to be pleased; for that which takes place
in a moment is a whole.
From these considerations it is clear, too,
that these thinkers are not right in saying
there is a movement or a coming into being
of pleasure. For these cannot be ascribed
to all things, but only to those that are
divisible and not wholes; there is no coming
into being of seeing nor of a point nor of
a unit, nor is any of these a movement or
coming into being; therefore there is no
movement or coming into being of pleasure
either; for it is a whole.
Since every sense is active in relation to
its object, and a sense which is in good
condition acts perfectly in relation to the
most beautiful of its objects (for perfect
activity seems to be ideally of this nature;
whether we say that it is active, or the
organ in which it resides, may be assumed
to be immaterial), it follows that in the
case of each sense the best activity is that
of the best-conditioned organ in relation
to the finest of its objects. And this activity
will be the most complete and pleasant. For,
while there is pleasure in respect of any
sense, and in respect of thought and contemplation
no less, the most complete is pleasantest,
and that of a well-conditioned organ in relation
to the worthiest of its objects is the most
complete; and the pleasure completes the
activity. But the pleasure does not complete
it in the same way as the combination of
object and sense, both good, just as health
and the doctor are not in the same way the
cause of a man's being healthy. (That pleasure
is produced in respect to each sense is plain;
for we speak of sights and sounds as pleasant.
It is also plain that it arises most of all
when both the sense is at its best and it
is active in reference to an object which
corresponds; when both object and perceiver
are of the best there will always be pleasure,
since the requisite agent and patient are
both present.) Pleasure completes the activity
not as the corresponding permanent state
does, by its immanence, but as an end which
supervenes as the bloom of youth does on
those in the flower of their age. So long,
then, as both the intelligible or sensible
object and the discriminating or contemplative
faculty are as they should be, the pleasure
will be involved in the activity; for when
both the passive and the active factor are
unchanged and are related to each other in
the same way, the same result naturally follows.
How, then, is it that no one is continuously
pleased? Is it that we grow weary? Certainly
all human beings are incapable of continuous
activity. Therefore pleasure also is not
continuous; for it accompanies activity.
Some things delight us when they are new,
but later do so less, for the same reason;
for at first the mind is in a state of stimulation
and intensely active about them, as people
are with respect to their vision when they
look hard at a thing, but afterwards our
activity is not of this kind, but has grown
relaxed; for which reason the pleasure also
is dulled.
One might think that all men desire pleasure
because they all aim at life; life is an
activity, and each man is active about those
things and with those faculties that he loves
most; e. g. the musician is active with his
hearing in reference to tunes, the student
with his mind in reference to theoretical
questions, and so on in each case; now pleasure
completes the activities, and therefore life,
which they desire. It is with good reason,
then, that they aim at pleasure too, since
for every one it completes life, which is
desirable. But whether we choose life for
the sake of pleasure or pleasure for the
sake of life is a question we may dismiss
for the present. For they seem to be bound
up together and not to admit of separation,
since without activity pleasure does not
arise, and every activity is completed by
the attendant pleasure.
5
For this reason pleasures seem, too, to differ
in kind. For things different in kind are,
we think, completed by different things (we
see this to be true both of natural objects
and of things produced by art, e. g. animals,
trees, a painting, a sculpture, a house,
an implement); and, similarly, we think that
activities differing in kind are completed
by things differing in kind. Now the activities
of thought differ from those of the senses,
and both differ among themselves, in kind;
so, therefore, do the pleasures that complete
them.
This may be seen, too, from the fact that
each of the pleasures is bound up with the
activity it completes. For an activity is
intensified by its proper pleasure, since
each class of things is better judged of
and brought to precision by those who engage
in the activity with pleasure; e. g. it is
those who enjoy geometrical thinking that
become geometers and grasp the various propositions
better, and, similarly, those who are fond
of music or of building, and so on, make
progress in their proper function by enjoying
it; so the pleasures intensify the activities,
and what intensifies a thing is proper to
it, but things different in kind have properties
different in kind.
This will be even more apparent from the
fact that activities are hindered by pleasures
arising from other sources. For people who
are fond of playing the flute are incapable
of attending to arguments if they overhear
some one playing the flute, since they enjoy
flute-playing more than the activity in hand;
so the pleasure connected with fluteplaying
destroys the activity concerned with argument.
This happens, similarly, in all other cases,
when one is active about two things at once;
the more pleasant activity drives out the
other, and if it is much more pleasant does
so all the more, so that one even ceases
from the other. This is why when we enjoy
anything very much we do not throw ourselves
into anything else, and do one thing only
when we are not much pleased by another;
e. g. in the theatre the people who eat sweets
do so most when the actors are poor. Now
since activities are made precise and more
enduring and better by their proper pleasure,
and injured by alien pleasures, evidently
the two kinds of pleasure are far apart.
For alien pleasures do pretty much what proper
pains do, since activities are destroyed
by their proper pains; e. g. if a man finds
writing or doing sums unpleasant and painful,
he does not write, or does not do sums, because
the activity is painful. So an activity suffers
contrary effects from its proper pleasures
and pains, i. e. from those that supervene
on it in virtue of its own nature. And alien
pleasures have been stated to do much the
same as pain; they destroy the activity,
only not to the same degree.
Now since activities differ in respect of
goodness and badness, and some are worthy
to be chosen, others to be avoided, and others
neutral, so, too, are the pleasures; for
to each activity there is a proper pleasure.
The pleasure proper to a worthy activity
is good and that proper to an unworthy activity
bad; just as the appetites for noble objects
are laudable, those for base objects culpable.
But the pleasures involved in activities
are more proper to them than the desires;
for the latter are separated both in time
and in nature, while the former are close
to the activities, and so hard to distinguish
from them that it admits of dispute whether
the activity is not the same as the pleasure.
(Still, pleasure does not seem to be thought
or perception-that would be strange; but
because they are not found apart they appear
to some people the same.) As activities are
different, then, so are the corresponding
pleasures. Now sight is superior to touch
in purity, and hearing and smell to taste;
the pleasures, therefore, are similarly superior,
and those of thought superior to these, and
within each of the two kinds some are superior
to others.
Each animal is thought to have a proper pleasure,
as it has a proper function; viz. that which
corresponds to its activity. If we survey
them species by species, too, this will be
evident; horse, dog, and man have different
pleasures, as Heraclitus says 'asses would
prefer sweepings to gold'; for food is pleasanter
than gold to asses. So the pleasures of creatures
different in kind differ in kind, and it
is plausible to suppose that those of a single
species do not differ. But they vary to no
small extent, in the case of men at least;
the same things delight some people and pain
others, and are painful and odious to some,
and pleasant to and liked by others. This
happens, too, in the case of sweet things;
the same things do not seem sweet to a man
in a fever and a healthy man-nor hot to a
weak man and one in good condition. The same
happens in other cases. But in all such matters
that which appears to the good man is thought
to be really so. If this is correct, as it
seems to be, and virtue and the good man
as such are the measure of each thing, those
also will be pleasures which appear so to
him, and those things pleasant which he enjoys.
If the things he finds tiresome seem pleasant
to some one, that is nothing surprising;
for men may be ruined and spoilt in many
ways; but the things are not pleasant, but
only pleasant to these people and to people
in this condition. Those which are admittedly
disgraceful plainly should not be said to
be pleasures, except to a perverted taste;
but of those that are thought to be good
what kind of pleasure or what pleasure should
be said to be that proper to man? Is it not
plain from the corresponding activities?
The pleasures follow these. Whether, then,
the perfect and supremely happy man has one
or more activities, the pleasures that perfect
these will be said in the strict sense to
be pleasures proper to man, and the rest
will be so in a secondary and fractional
way, as are the activities.
6
Now that we have spoken of the virtues, the
forms of friendship, and the varieties of
pleasure, what remains is to discuss in outline
the nature of happiness, since this is what
we state the end of human nature to be. Our
discussion will be the more concise if we
first sum up what we have said already. We
said, then, that it is not a disposition;
for if it were it might belong to some one
who was asleep throughout his life, living
the life of a plant, or, again, to some one
who was suffering the greatest misfortunes.
If these implications are unacceptable, and
we must rather class happiness as an activity,
as we have said before, and if some activities
are necessary, and desirable for the sake
of something else, while others are so in
themselves, evidently happiness must be placed
among those desirable in themselves, not
among those desirable for the sake of something
else; for happiness does not lack anything,
but is self-sufficient. Now those activities
are desirable in themselves from which nothing
is sought beyond the activity. And of this
nature virtuous actions are thought to be;
for to do noble and good deeds is a thing
desirable for its own sake.
Pleasant amusements also are thought to be
of this nature; we choose them not for the
sake of other things; for we are injured
rather than benefited by them, since we are
led to neglect our bodies and our property.
But most of the people who are deemed happy
take refuge in such pastimes, which is the
reason why those who are ready-witted at
them are highly esteemed at the courts of
tyrants; they make themselves pleasant companions
in the tyrants' favourite pursuits, and that
is the sort of man they want. Now these things
are thought to be of the nature of happiness
because people in despotic positions spend
their leisure in them, but perhaps such people
prove nothing; for virtue and reason, from
which good activities flow, do not depend
on despotic position; nor, if these people,
who have never tasted pure and generous pleasure,
take refuge in the bodily pleasures, should
these for that reason be thought more desirable;
for boys, too, think the things that are
valued among themselves are the best. It
is to be expected, then, that, as different
things seem valuable to boys and to men,
so they should to bad men and to good. Now,
as we have often maintained, those things
are both valuable and pleasant which are
such to the good man; and to each man the
activity in accordance with his own disposition
is most desirable, and, therefore, to the
good man that which is in accordance with
virtue. Happiness, therefore, does not lie
in amusement; it would, indeed, be strange
if the end were amusement, and one were to
take trouble and suffer hardship all one's
life in order to amuse oneself. For, in a
word, everything that we choose we choose
for the sake of something else-except happiness,
which is an end. Now to exert oneself and
work for the sake of amusement seems silly
and utterly childish. But to amuse oneself
in order that one may exert oneself, as Anacharsis
puts it, seems right; for amusement is a
sort of relaxation, and we need relaxation
because we cannot work continuously. Relaxation,
then, is not an end; for it is taken for
the sake of activity.
The happy life is thought to be virtuous;
now a virtuous life requires exertion, and
does not consist in amusement. And we say
that serious things are better than laughable
things and those connected with amusement,
and that the activity of the better of any
two things-whether it be two elements of
our being or two men-is the more serious;
but the activity of the better is ipso facto
superior and more of the nature of happiness.
And any chance person-even a slave-can enjoy
the bodily pleasures no less than the best
man; but no one assigns to a slave a share
in happiness-unless he assigns to him also
a share in human life. For happiness does
not lie in such occupations, but, as we have
said before, in virtuous activities.
7
If happiness is activity in accordance with
virtue, it is reasonable that it should be
in accordance with the highest virtue; and
this will be that of the best thing in us.
Whether it be reason or something else that
is this element which is thought to be our
natural ruler and guide and to take thought
of things noble and divine, whether it be
itself also divine or only the most divine
element in us, the activity of this in accordance
with its proper virtue will be perfect happiness.
That this activity is contemplative we have
already said.
Now this would seem to be in agreement both
with what we said before and with the truth.
For, firstly, this activity is the best (since
not only is reason the best thing in us,
but the objects of reason are the best of
knowable objects); and secondly, it is the
most continuous, since we can contemplate
truth more continuously than we can do anything.
And we think happiness has pleasure mingled
with it, but the activity of philosophic
wisdom is admittedly the pleasantest of virtuous
activities; at all events the pursuit of
it is thought to offer pleasures marvellous
for their purity and their enduringness,
and it is to be expected that those who know
will pass their time more pleasantly than
those who inquire. And the self-sufficiency
that is spoken of must belong most to the
contemplative activity. For while a philosopher,
as well as a just man or one possessing any
other virtue, needs the necessaries of life,
when they are sufficiently equipped with
things of that sort the just man needs people
towards whom and with whom he shall act justly,
and the temperate man, the brave man, and
each of the others is in the same case, but
the philosopher, even when by himself, can
contemplate truth, and the better the wiser
he is; he can perhaps do so better if he
has fellow-workers, but still he is the most
self-sufficient. And this activity alone
would seem to be loved for its own sake;
for nothing arises from it apart from the
contemplating, while from practical activities
we gain more or less apart from the action.
And happiness is thought to depend on leisure;
for we are busy that we may have leisure,
and make war that we may live in peace. Now
the activity of the practical virtues is
exhibited in political or military affairs,
but the actions concerned with these seem
to be unleisurely. Warlike actions are completely
so (for no one chooses to be at war, or provokes
war, for the sake of being at war; any one
would seem absolutely murderous if he were
to make enemies of his friends in order to
bring about battle and slaughter); but the
action of the statesman is also unleisurely,
and-apart from the political action itself-aims
at despotic power and honours, or at all
events happiness, for him and his fellow
citizens-a happiness different from political
action, and evidently sought as being different.
So if among virtuous actions political and
military actions are distinguished by nobility
and greatness, and these are unleisurely
and aim at an end and are not desirable for
their own sake, but the activity of reason,
which is contemplative, seems both to be
superior in serious worth and to aim at no
end beyond itself, and to have its pleasure
proper to itself (and this augments the activity),
and the self-sufficiency, leisureliness,
unweariedness (so far as this is possible
for man), and all the other attributes ascribed
to the supremely happy man are evidently
those connected with this activity, it follows
that this will be the complete happiness
of man, if it be allowed a complete term
of life (for none of the attributes of happiness
is incomplete).
But such a life would be too high for man;
for it is not in so far as he is man that
he will live so, but in so far as something
divine is present in him; and by so much
as this is superior to our composite nature
is its activity superior to that which is
the exercise of the other kind of virtue.
If reason is divine, then, in comparison
with man, the life according to it is divine
in comparison with human life. But we must
not follow those who advise us, being men,
to think of human things, and, being mortal,
of mortal things, but must, so far as we
can, make ourselves immortal, and strain
every nerve to live in accordance with the
best thing in us; for even if it be small
in bulk, much more does it in power and worth
surpass everything. This would seem, too,
to be each man himself, since it is the authoritative
and better part of him. It would be strange,
then, if he were to choose not the life of
his self but that of something else. And
what we said before' will apply now; that
which is proper to each thing is by nature
best and most pleasant for each thing; for
man, therefore, the life according to reason
is best and pleasantest, since reason more
than anything else is man. This life therefore
is also the happiest.
8
But in a secondary degree the life in accordance
with the other kind of virtue is happy; for
the activities in accordance with this befit
our human estate. Just and brave acts, and
other virtuous acts, we do in relation to
each other, observing our respective duties
with regard to contracts and services and
all manner of actions and with regard to
passions; and all of these seem to be typically
human. Some of them seem even to arise from
the body, and virtue of character to be in
many ways bound up with the passions. Practical
wisdom, too, is linked to virtue of character,
and this to practical wisdom, since the principles
of practical wisdom are in accordance with
the moral virtues and rightness in morals
is in accordance with practical wisdom. Being
connected with the passions also, the moral
virtues must belong to our composite nature;
and the virtues of our composite nature are
human; so, therefore, are the life and the
happiness which correspond to these. The
excellence of the reason is a thing apart;
we must be content to say this much about
it, for to describe it precisely is a task
greater than our purpose requires. It would
seem, however, also to need external equipment
but little, or less than moral virtue does.
Grant that both need the necessaries, and
do so equally, even if the statesman's work
is the more concerned with the body and things
of that sort; for there will be little difference
there; but in what they need for the exercise
of their activities there will be much difference.
The liberal man will need money for the doing
of his liberal deeds, and the just man too
will need it for the returning of services
(for wishes are hard to discern, and even
people who are not just pretend to wish to
act justly); and the brave man will need
power if he is to accomplish any of the acts
that correspond to his virtue, and the temperate
man will need opportunity; for how else is
either he or any of the others to be recognized?
It is debated, too, whether the will or the
deed is more essential to virtue, which is
assumed to involve both; it is surely clear
that its perfection involves both; but for
deeds many things are needed, and more, the
greater and nobler the deeds are. But the
man who is contemplating the truth needs
no such thing, at least with a view to the
exercise of his activity; indeed they are,
one may say, even hindrances, at all events
to his contemplation; but in so far as he
is a man and lives with a number of people,
he chooses to do virtuous acts; he will therefore
need such aids to living a human life.
But that perfect happiness is a contemplative
activity will appear from the following consideration
as well. We assume the gods to be above all
other beings blessed and happy; but what
sort of actions must we assign to them? Acts
of justice? Will not the gods seem absurd
if they make contracts and return deposits,
and so on? Acts of a brave man, then, confronting
dangers and running risks because it is noble
to do so? Or liberal acts? To whom will they
give? It will be strange if they are really
to have money or anything of the kind. And
what would their temperate acts be? Is not
such praise tasteless, since they have no
bad appetites? If we were to run through
them all, the circumstances of action would
be found trivial and unworthy of gods. Still,
every one supposes that they live and therefore
that they are active; we cannot suppose them
to sleep like Endymion. Now if you take away
from a living being action, and still more
production, what is left but contemplation?
Therefore the activity of God, which surpasses
all others in blessedness, must be contemplative;
and of human activities, therefore, that
which is most akin to this must be most of
the nature of happiness.
This is indicated, too, by the fact that
the other animals have no share in happiness,
being completely deprived of such activity.
For while the whole life of the gods is blessed,
and that of men too in so far as some likeness
of such activity belongs to them, none of
the other animals is happy, since they in
no way share in contemplation. Happiness
extends, then, just so far as contemplation
does, and those to whom contemplation more
fully belongs are more truly happy, not as
a mere concomitant but in virtue of the contemplation;
for this is in itself precious. Happiness,
therefore, must be some form of contemplation.
But, being a man, one will also need external
prosperity; for our nature is not self-sufficient
for the purpose of contemplation, but our
body also must be healthy and must have food
and other attention. Still, we must not think
that the man who is to be happy will need
many things or great things, merely because
he cannot be supremely happy without external
goods; for self-sufficiency and action do
not involve excess, and we can do noble acts
without ruling earth and sea; for even with
moderate advantages one can act virtuously
(this is manifest enough; for private persons
are thought to do worthy acts no less than
despots-indeed even more); and it is enough
that we should have so much as that; for
the life of the man who is active in accordance
with virtue will be happy. Solon, too, was
perhaps sketching well the happy man when
he described him as moderately furnished
with externals but as having done (as Solon
thought) the noblest acts, and lived temperately;
for one can with but moderate possessions
do what one ought. Anaxagoras also seems
to have supposed the happy man not to be
rich nor a despot, when he said that he would
not be surprised if the happy man were to
seem to most people a strange person; for
they judge by externals, since these are
all they perceive. The opinions of the wise
seem, then, to harmonize with our arguments.
But while even such things carry some conviction,
the truth in practical matters is discerned
from the facts of life; for these are the
decisive factor. We must therefore survey
what we have already said, bringing it to
the test of the facts of life, and if it
harmonizes with the facts we must accept
it, but if it clashes with them we must suppose
it to be mere theory. Now he who exercises
his reason and cultivates it seems to be
both in the best state of mind and most dear
to the gods. For if the gods have any care
for human affairs, as they are thought to
have, it would be reasonable both that they
should delight in that which was best and
most akin to them (i. e. reason) and that
they should reward those who love and honour
this most, as caring for the things that
are dear to them and acting both rightly
and nobly. And that all these attributes
belong most of all to the philosopher is
manifest. He, therefore, is the dearest to
the gods. And he who is that will presumably
be also the happiest; so that in this way
too the philosopher will more than any other
be happy.
9
If these matters and the virtues, and also
friendship and pleasure, have been dealt
with sufficiently in outline, are we to suppose
that our programme has reached its end? Surely,
as the saying goes, where there are things
to be done the end is not to survey and recognize
the various things, but rather to do them;
with regard to virtue, then, it is not enough
to know, but we must try to have and use
it, or try any other way there may be of
becoming good. Now if arguments were in themselves
enough to make men good, they would justly,
as Theognis says, have won very great rewards,
and such rewards should have been provided;
but as things are, while they seem to have
power to encourage and stimulate the generous-minded
among our youth, and to make a character
which is gently born, and a true lover of
what is noble, ready to be possessed by virtue,
they are not able to encourage the many to
nobility and goodness. For these do not by
nature obey the sense of shame, but only
fear, and do not abstain from bad acts because
of their baseness but through fear of punishment;
living by passion they pursue their own pleasures
and the means to them, and and the opposite
pains, and have not even a conception of
what is noble and truly pleasant, since they
have never tasted it. What argument would
remould such people? It is hard, if not impossible,
to remove by argument the traits that have
long since been incorporated in the character;
and perhaps we must be content if, when all
the influences by which we are thought to
become good are present, we get some tincture
of virtue.
Now some think that we are made good by nature,
others by habituation, others by teaching.
Nature's part evidently does not depend on
us, but as a result of some divine causes
is present in those who are truly fortunate;
while argument and teaching, we may suspect,
are not powerful with all men, but the soul
of the student must first have been cultivated
by means of habits for noble joy and noble
hatred, like earth which is to nourish the
seed. For he who lives as passion directs
will not hear argument that dissuades him,
nor understand it if he does; and how can
we persuade one in such a state to change
his ways? And in general passion seems to
yield not to argument but to force. The character,
then, must somehow be there already with
a kinship to virtue, loving what is noble
and hating what is base.
But it is difficult to get from youth up
a right training for virtue if one has not
been brought up under right laws; for to
live temperately and hardily is not pleasant
to most people, especially when they are
young. For this reason their nurture and
occupations should be fixed by law; for they
will not be painful when they have become
customary. But it is surely not enough that
when they are young they should get the right
nurture and attention; since they must, even
when they are grown up, practise and be habituated
to them, we shall need laws for this as well,
and generally speaking to cover the whole
of life; for most people obey necessity rather
than argument, and punishments rather than
the sense of what is noble.
This is why some think that legislators ought
to stimulate men to virtue and urge them
forward by the motive of the noble, on the
assumption that those who have been well
advanced by the formation of habits will
attend to such influences; and that punishments
and penalties should be imposed on those
who disobey and are of inferior nature, while
the incurably bad should be completely banished.
A good man (they think), since he lives with
his mind fixed on what is noble, will submit
to argument, while a bad man, whose desire
is for pleasure, is corrected by pain like
a beast of burden. This is, too, why they
say the pains inflicted should be those that
are most opposed to the pleasures such men
love.
However that may be, if (as we have said)
the man who is to be good must be well trained
and habituated, and go on to spend his time
in worthy occupations and neither willingly
nor unwillingly do bad actions, and if this
can be brought about if men live in accordance
with a sort of reason and right order, provided
this has force,-if this be so, the paternal
command indeed has not the required force
or compulsive power (nor in general has the
command of one man, unless he be a king or
something similar), but the law has compulsive
power, while it is at the same time a rule
proceeding from a sort of practical wisdom
and reason. And while people hate men who
oppose their impulses, even if they oppose
them rightly, the law in its ordaining of
what is good is not burdensome.
In the Spartan state alone, or almost alone,
the legislator seems to have paid attention
to questions of nurture and occupations;
in most states such matters have been neglected,
and each man lives as he pleases, Cyclops-fashion,
'to his own wife and children dealing law'.
Now it is best that there should be a public
and proper care for such matters; but if
they are neglected by the community it would
seem right for each man to help his children
and friends towards virtue, and that they
should have the power, or at least the will,
to do this.
It would seem from what has been said that
he can do this better if he makes himself
capable of legislating. For public control
is plainly effected by laws, and good control
by good laws; whether written or unwritten
would seem to make no difference, nor whether
they are laws providing for the education
of individuals or of groups-any more than
it does in the case of music or gymnastics
and other such pursuits. For as in cities
laws and prevailing types of character have
force, so in households do the injunctions
and the habits of the father, and these have
even more because of the tie of blood and
the benefits he confers; for the children
start with a natural affection and disposition
to obey. Further, private education has an
advantage over public, as private medical
treatment has; for while in general rest
and abstinence from food are good for a man
in a fever, for a particular man they may
not be; and a boxer presumably does not prescribe
the same style of fighting to all his pupils.
It would seem, then, that the detail is worked
out with more precision if the control is
private; for each person is more likely to
get what suits his case.
But the details can be best looked after,
one by one, by a doctor or gymnastic instructor
or any one else who has the general knowledge
of what is good for every one or for people
of a certain kind (for the sciences both
are said to be, and are, concerned with what
is universal); not but what some particular
detail may perhaps be well looked after by
an unscientific person, if he has studied
accurately in the light of experience what
happens in each case, just as some people
seem to be their own best doctors, though
they could give no help to any one else.
None the less, it will perhaps be agreed
that if a man does wish to become master
of an art or science he must go to the universal,
and come to know it as well as possible;
for, as we have said, it is with this that
the sciences are concerned.
And surely he who wants to make men, whether
many or few, better by his care must try
to become capable of legislating, if it is
through laws that we can become good. For
to get any one whatever-any one who is put
before us-into the right condition is not
for the first chance comer; if any one can
do it, it is the man who knows, just as in
medicine and all other matters which give
scope for care and prudence.
Must we not, then, next examine whence or
how one can learn how to legislate? Is it,
as in all other cases, from statesmen? Certainly
it was thought to be a part of statesmanship.
Or is a difference apparent between statesmanship
and the other sciences and arts? In the others
the same people are found offering to teach
the arts and practising them, e. g. doctors
or painters; but while the sophists profess
to teach politics, it is practised not by
any of them but by the politicians, who would
seem to do so by dint of a certain skill
and experience rather than of thought; for
they are not found either writing or speaking
about such matters (though it were a nobler
occupation perhaps than composing speeches
for the law-courts and the assembly), nor
again are they found to have made statesmen
of their own sons or any other of their friends.
But it was to be expected that they should
if they could; for there is nothing better
than such a skill that they could have left
to their cities, or could prefer to have
for themselves, or, therefore, for those
dearest to them. Still, experience seems
to contribute not a little; else they could
not have become politicians by familiarity
with politics; and so it seems that those
who aim at knowing about the art of politics
need experience as well.
But those of the sophists who profess the
art seem to be very far from teaching it.
For, to put the matter generally, they do
not even know what kind of thing it is nor
what kinds of things it is about; otherwise
they would not have classed it as identical
with rhetoric or even inferior to it, nor
have thought it easy to legislate by collecting
the laws that are thought well of; they say
it is possible to select the best laws, as
though even the selection did not demand
intelligence and as though right judgement
were not the greatest thing, as in matters
of music. For while people experienced in
any department judge rightly the works produced
in it, and understand by what means or how
they are achieved, and what harmonizes with
what, the inexperienced must be content if
they do not fail to see whether the work
has been well or ill made-as in the case
of painting. Now laws are as it were the'
works' of the political art; how then can
one learn from them to be a legislator, or
judge which are best? Even medical men do
not seem to be made by a study of text-books.
Yet people try, at any rate, to state not
only the treatments, but also how particular
classes of people can be cured and should
be treated-distinguishing the various habits
of body; but while this seems useful to experienced
people, to the inexperienced it is valueless.
Surely, then, while collections of laws,
and of constitutions also, may be serviceable
to those who can study them and judge what
is good or bad and what enactments suit what
circumstances, those who go through such
collections without a practised faculty will
not have right judgement (unless it be as
a spontaneous gift of nature), though they
may perhaps become more intelligent in such
matters.
Now our predecessors have left the subject
of legislation to us unexamined; it is perhaps
best, therefore, that we should ourselves
study it, and in general study the question
of the constitution, in order to complete
to the best of our ability our philosophy
of human nature. First, then, if anything
has been said well in detail by earlier thinkers,
let us try to review it; then in the light
of the constitutions we have collected let
us study what sorts of influence preserve
and destroy states, and what sorts preserve
or destroy the particular kinds of constitution,
and to what causes it is due that some are
well and others ill administered. When these
have been studied we shall perhaps be more
likely to see with a comprehensive view,
which constitution is best, and how each
must be ordered, and what laws and customs
it must use, if it is to be at its best.
Let us make a beginning of our discussion.
THE END
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