Digital Logos Edition
This volume contains H. Rackham’s translation of Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics.
“Therefore, the Good of man must be the end of the science of Politics.” (Page 7)
“Virtue being, as we have seen, of two kinds, intellectual and moral, intellectual virtue is for the most part both produced and increased by instruction,* and therefore requires experience and time; whereas moral or ethical virtue is the product of habit (ethos), and has indeed derived its name, with a slight variation of form, [2] from that word.a And therefore it is clear that none of the moral virtues is engendered in us by nature, for no natural property can be altered by habit.” (Page 69)
“This then being its aim, our investigation is in a sense the study of Politics.” (Page 7)
“As far as the name goes, we may almost say that the great majority of mankind are agreed about this; for both the multitude and persons of refinement speak of it as Happiness,a and conceive ‘the good life’ or ‘doing well’b to be the same thing as ‘being happy.’” (Page 11)
“Virtue then is a settled disposition of the mind determining the choicec of actions and emotions, consisting essentially in the observance of the mean relative to us, this being determined by principle, that is,d as the prudent man would determine it.” (Page 95)