To quickly review the first post on the Hillsdale course Aristotle’s Ethics, there were three main points.
- We are looking for an appropriate level of precision and evidence. The precision and evidence expected of mathematics is different from that expected for biology, history, etc.
- There is a hierarchy of “good” in things, pursuits, methods, etc. Some things, pursuits, methods, etc., are more valuable than others. I think it is easier to think of it as a hierarchy of value, maybe, but the Nicomachean Ethics (EN) consistently calls it good, the good, goods, etc.
- This hierarchy is established first by the theory that if something exists for the sake of something else, that something else is a higher good, or more valuable.
The example was the work of the bridle maker, which, in ancient Athens,
was for the sake of having cavalry, and cavalry was for the sake of military victory,
and that was for the sake of preserving the city-state. So, the work of the
bridle maker is good, but that of the cavalryman is a higher good, that of the
general even higher, and the existence of the city-state yet higher. I surmised
that this would make the work of citizenship, political engagement, the highest
form of work.
The very highest goods exist for their own sake, like
happiness.