Taking Life Seriously: Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics (Zoom)
Winter (14+ hours) | Available (Membership Required)
We will spend eight sessions doing an accessible reading of Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics, one of the central philosophical works attempting to make sense of the question, “What is a good life?” We will also examine some critical commentary on Aristotle (week 7—Kant) and some more modern thinkers who follow the general Aristotelean approach (week 8) Aristotle posits a concept called “the good” and states that it is somehow the goal of human life. We will explore this and see if we can make any sense of what on its face seems a preposterous claim—that there is a single “good” for humans, and that, in some sense, the good could be attainable. You don’t need any background in philosophy or Greek or anything else to participate, but you do need to be willing to read pretty closely and think along with Aristotle. There isn’t any “handy dandy” answer to be gleaned from this work, nothing you can put on a 3” x 5” card. But Aristotle’s Ethics is among the most important Western efforts at addressing the question. As an optional exercise, we will be referring to Sparshott’s Taking Life Seriously, a leading commentary on Aristotle’s work.
Required Book:
- Aristotle’s Nichomachean Ethics - Aristotle (ISBN-13: 978-0226026756)
Optional Books:
- Routledge Philosophy GuideBook to Aristotle on Ethics (Routledge Philosophy GuideBooks) 1st Edition - Gerard Hughes (ISBN-13: 978-0415221870)
- Taking Life Seriously - Francis Edward Sparshott (ISBN-13: 978-0802071798)
Joseph Ronan
Joseph Ronan is a practicing lawyer with an office in Norwich, and has law degrees from NYU Law School, a BA in philosophy from Haverford College, and an MA in English from Rutgers. He views Aristotle as one of the most challenging thinkers available to us, and is happy to engage with people who are interested in Aristotle’s thought.