Another Dissimilarity between Moral Virtue and Skills: An Interpretation of Nicomachean Ethics II 4

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Abstract

In Nicomachean Ethics II 4 Aristotle famously raises a puzzle concerning moral habituation, and he seems to dissolve it by recourse to the analogy between moral virtue and skills. A new interpretation of the chapter is offered on the basis of an important evaluative dissimilarity then noted by Aristotle, one almost universally disregarded by interpreters of the chapter. I elucidate the nature of the dissimilarity in question and argue for its paramount importance for understanding Aristotle’s conception of moral agency. I also show that it is the particularly intricate and puzzling character of the chapter that has prevented scholars from noticing such a dissimilarity and from integrating it to the interpretation of the chapter.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationStudies in the History of Philosophy of Mind
PublisherSpringer Nature
Pages199-215
Number of pages17
DOIs
StatePublished - 2018
Externally publishedYes

Publication series

NameStudies in the History of Philosophy of Mind
Volume20
ISSN (Print)1573-5834
ISSN (Electronic)2542-9922

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