CNE/PHL 370 Study Guide for Aristotle Exam #2
Candidates for essays are numbered in red.
Nicomachean Ethics
Book 1
1. Explain the argument for the superiority of superordinate crafts and ends over
subordinate crafts and ends in Ch. 1. Give examples.
2. What is identified as the 'most controlling science' in Ch. 2? What are the three
subordinate sciences under this ruling science?
3. Explain the degree of exactness and certainty that is said to be possible in the study
of ethics (1094b20 f., 1104a1-9 and elsewhere).
4. Explain the nature of good judging and who the unconditionally good judge is (1095a1).
5. To benefit from the study of ethics (and political science) what is necessary? (1095b4)
6. What are the four prominent types of life
(Ch. 5)? What criticisms are made of three of these lives to
disqualify them as candidates for what eudaimonia consists in?
7. Explain Aristotle's argument that 'happiness' (eudaimonia)
is the final, complete end (i.e. supreme good). For what reasons must it be a kind
of activity? (Chs. 7-8)
8. Present Aristotle's argument for a human ergon
(1097b24-1098a17).
9. State precisely A's complete definition of eudaimonia (Ch.
10: 1101a14-18; not in CCR).
10. Identify the three types of goods distinguished in Ch. 8.
11. Explain the relationship between noble and virtuous actions on the one hand, and
pleasure and pain on the other (Ch. 8: 1099a18-20). Explain the role of pleasure and
pain in A's ethical theory.
Book 2
12. Identify and contrast the intellectual virtues and how they are
acquired with the virtues of character and how they are acquired (Ch. 1).
Explain how virtues arise differently than things that come by nature (e.g. the
senses). Give examples of various virtues of character.
13. Explain the importance of habituation in A's account of character
development (Chs. 1-2).
14. What is the purpose of studying ethics? (Ch. 2: 1103b27)
15. Explain A's brief argument that virtue of character is concerned with pleasures and
pains (Ch. 3: 1104b9-11). What evidence does A offer for his view?
16. Identify the three objects of choice and their corresponding
contraries (the three objects of avoidance) (Ch. 3).
17. State the three features of the state an agent must be in to perform
a virtuous action in a virtuous way (Ch. 4: 1105a30-33).
18. Identify the three genera of psychic conditions and explain what each
condition is (Ch. 5). Explain A's argument for which of these is the genus virtue
belongs to.
19. Present the argument that every organ and
organism has its own excellence (1106a18-24).
20. Explain in detail A's Doctrine of the Mean
(intermediate) (Chs. 2 & 6). Distinguish the intermediate in the object from the
intermediate relative to us. Give examples of things that admit of excess,
deficiency, and the mean. Identify the five aspects of having
feelings, pleasure, and pain in "the intermediate and best condition... proper to
virtue" (1106b20-23). State which three feelings and which three
actions do not admit of an intermediate and explain why.
21. State precisely A's complete definition of arete
(1106b36-1107a2).
Book 6
22. Diagram A's anatomy of the human soul (i.e. its divisions and
sub-parts) and explain the function of each part (Ch. 1).
23. What are the three things in the soul that control action and
truth? (Ch. 2) What originates action? What is decision, exactly?
(1139b4)
24. Explain in detail A's account, and definitions, of phronesis and sophia
(Chs. 5, 7, 12, 13). Distinguish cleverness from phronesis. Explain
the difference between natural virtue and full virtue.
Book 7
25. Identify the three kinds of moral states to be avoided and their
contraries (Ch. 1).
26. Explain in detail A's theory of akrasia
(incontinence). What does A say about Socrates' view of akrasia?
(1145b27-28) What two senses of "know" does A distinguish in his account
of akrasia? What three types of people are comparable to the akratic man?
How does the self-indulgent man differ from the akratic man? (Ch. 3)
Describe how A uses the practical syllogism to identify the reasoning
behind the akratic man's behavior.
Book 10
27. Explain why eudaimonia is not a state (Ch. 6: 1176a34).
28. Present the argument for what eudaimonia
consists in (Ch. 6-7). Include the sub-argument that "happiness"
is not found in amusement. Explain what theoria is (1177a18-20).
Describe the Seven Reasons the supreme virtue is sophia
and the happiest activity is theoria. Why are children, nonhuman animals,
and slaves incapable of eudaimonia?
29. Describe A's account of the life that is happy in
a secondary degree (Ch. 8: 1178a9-b7). Why do humans choose this kind of
life?
30. Present A's argument that the gods must study ("theorize") (Ch. 8).
31. Explain A's view of who arguments do and don't influence. What
do the many naturally obey? (Ch. 9: 1179b7-19).
32. Why are laws and punishment needed? What do the many yield to?
(Ch. 9).
Politics, Book 1
33. Explain the argument that the polis aims at the highest good (Ch. 1).
34. Describe in detail the argument for the natural
genesis of the polis (Ch. 2: 1252a25-1252b30).
35. Present the argument that humans are the most
political animals (Ch. 2: 1253a8-18). What specifically produces both a
household and a polis?
36. Present A's brief argument that the polis is naturally prior to the
individual (Ch. 2: 1253a26-27).
37. Explain under which conditions a human being is the best
animal, and under which conditions a human being is the worst animal (Ch.
2: 1253a31-40).
38. Explain A's view that a human being who by nature lives apart from human communities
is either subhuman or superhuman (Ch. 2: 1253a2-7,
1253a28-29).