In my view, Aristotelians are people who seek guidance from Aristotle's ethics in considering how to live their lives. Please read on for an explanation.
I was prompted to pose this his question by an
article by John Sellars entitled ‘How
to be an Aristotelian’ (recently published in
Antigone). While thinking about the
question I read Sellars’ new book, Aristotle,
Understanding the World’s Greatest Philosopher. By
coincidence, at the same time I was reading Stoicism
Today, Volume 4, which
contains an article by John Sellars entitled ‘Hard Truths and Happiness’. I
mention the Stoicism article because the approach that Sellars adopts in
discussing what it means to be a Stoic seems to me to be relevant to considering
what it means to be an Aristotelian. (I also think many of the articles in
Stoicism Today are worth reading. It is fascinating to read about how people
seek to apply this ancient philosophy in their daily lives.)
This article will meander around, so it is particularly
important in this instance to foreshadow what I am going to tell you
before I tell it to you. I will begin by outlining Sellars’ view about what it
means to be a Stoic. I will then discuss the view Sellars presents of what it
means to be an Aristotelian in his Antigone article before moving to a
discussion of the approach he adopts in his book. I will conclude with some
personal comments on what it means to be an Aristotelian.
What principles do you need to accept to be a
Stoic?
In his Stoicism Today article, John Sellars’ argues
that Stoicism is a philosophy that is guided by the idea that people want to
live well. Stoicism is a philosophy which makes claims about the nature of the
world. It is a way of living, not merely a collection of exercises, or therapies,
aimed at making people feel happy. Stoics believe that learning to live well
within the world involves understanding what it is and how it works. However, Sellars
implies that means more than just a commonsense understanding. He argues that
if you want to get to grips with Stoic philosophy as a way of life, you need to
get to grips with the fundamental principle that “everything is ultimately
matter in a process of continual change”.
Everything in this world does seem to be in a process
of continual change. Perhaps everything in the cosmos is matter. Who knows? I
am not even sure what that means. In any case, I don’t understand how trying to
get my head around the ultimate nature of the cosmos would make me a better
human. It is interesting to read about the Higgs boson etc. but that seems to
have less relevance in considering how I should live my life than the views of Robert Higgs
on Facebook.
What principles do you need to accept to be an
Aristotelian?
In his Antigone article, John Sellars makes what he
describes as “a wild claim” that Aristotle “is the single most important human being
ever to have lived”. To support that claim he finds reasons to rule out Jesus
and other possible candidates. However, his main argument is that Aristotle
shaped the way we think about so many things including by laying “the
foundations for all empirical science”.
In considering what it means to be an Aristotelian, Sellars
suggests that there are two ways in which we can use the word Aristotelian. The
first involves “dogmatic Aristotelianism” – to subscribe to the truthfulness of
the assertions that Aristotle made in the texts that he left behind. The second
simply involves joining Aristotle in the ongoing process of trying to
understand the world in which we live.
A few weeks ago I drew attention to the Antigone
article in a Facebook post. In his response, Roderick Long, a philosopher,
wrote:
“Seems like
a false dichotomy: either being an
Aristotelean means being a rigid, dogmatic adherent of a fixed and detailed
Aristotelean system, or else it means something so watered down that any
sincere seeker after truth counts as an Aristotelean. Neither of these, of course, is what we who
call ourselves Aristoteleans mean by Aristoteleanism. Sellars is unfortunately failing to reckon
with the possibility that we can learn not just from Aristotle's truth-seeking
attitude but from his actual arguments.”
My response to Roderick:
“I am inclined to agree with you. However, when I praise
Aristotle’s arguments about happiness, ethics etc. I am sometimes reminded (by
people with science training) of all the things that Aristotle got wrong. So,
if a case can be made that he was an early advocate of scientific method
(rather than a dogmatist) that does seem an important rhetorical point”.
I added that
I was interested to read Sellars’ book, to see what he writes there about
Aristotle’s arguments.
What does
Sellars’ book say about Aristotle’s arguments?
John Sellars’ book is a short intellectual history of Aristotle. It is intended to serve as an introductory text but some people who already have some knowledge of Aristotle’s writings may also benefit from reading it. I found it enlightening because I had not previously considered how one thing may have led to another in the development of Aristotle’s views at different stages of his life. For example, the time Aristotle spent studying animals on Lesbos seems to have been important in his rejection of reductive materialism and the development of his thoughts about the purposes of living organisms, including humans.
In the book,
Sellars provides an account of Aristotle’s struggle with Plato’s views and the
development of his own ideas about being, substance, the idea that natural
entities have intrinsic purposes (natural teleology) and the difference between
actuality and potentiality. He summarises thus Aristotle’s argument about what
it means to be a human being:
“So, a human
being is a living thing with a certain set of capacities: the ability to grow,
move, and reproduce. These capacities are ones that we share with other
animals. The distinctive capacity of humans, Aristotle says, is the ability to
reason: humans are rational animals. The defining characteristic of humans,
then, is the ability to think rationally. The vast majority of adult humans
have this capacity; we are all, we might say, potentially thinking beings.
However, we are only truly thinking beings when we are actually thinking, when
we actualize that potential and use the capacity. In short, to be a human being
is not to exist statically, but instead to engage in a whole range of
distinctively human activities, the most important of which is thinking.”
However, the
book also presents Sellars’ view, referred to above, that there are two
different ways in which we can use the word Aristotelian and that he prefers
the second view - being an Aristotelian simply involves joining him in the
ongoing process of trying to understand the world in which we live.
While I
think Sellars view of what it means to be an Aristotelian is excessively broad,
I think he performs a useful service in demolishing the view that Aristotle was
a dogmatist. He notes that some thinkers in the 16th century, who
were critical of clerical dogmatism, were aware that Aristotle was a champion
of observation and open inquiry. He notes that even Galileo was happy to
describe himself as an Aristotelian because he knew that Aristotle recognised
that every theory is open to refutation by further observation.
My
view
As already noted, I find it
difficult to accept that everyone who is trying to understand the world in
which we live is an Aristotelian. I think that is a necessary condition to be
an Aristotelian, but not a sufficient condition.
It seems to
me that Aristotelians accept certain philosophical principles, such as natural
teleology, that are not accepted by everyone who is trying to understand the
world. Unfortunately, my knowledge of Aristotelian philosophy is not sufficient
to enable me to advance that argument with much confidence. Perhaps I am wrong.
If you think that is so, please tell me why.
My main
point is that in considering what it means to be an Aristotelian it is
appropriate to adopt a line of argument like that adopted by John Sellars in
considering what it means to be a Stoic. Like Stoics, Aristotelians are also
guided by a philosophy which is concerned with what it means to live well. That
philosophy is Aristotelian ethics.
The passage
from Sellars’ book about the nature of a human being (quoted above) describes
the philosophic foundation for Aristotelian ethics.
Many people
who are trying to understand the world have no understanding of Aristotelian
ethics and obtain no guidance from it in how they live their lives. I don’t
think it makes sense to view such people as Aristotelians.