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History
Civilisation
Earliest Primary (Pristine) States
Directly or indirectly
fostered emergence of secondary states
via interaction with less developed neighbours
- trade
- warfare
- migration
- general ideological influence
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One of major milestones in evolution of polities / societies
is development of states, as follows:
- large-scale
- populous
- politically centralised
- socially stratified polities/societies
- governed by powerful rulers
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_sovereign_states_in_the_11th_century_BC
polity (pl. polities)
1. form of government of a nation, state, church or organisation
2. organised society (eg nation) having specific form of govt
fm. Old French, fm Late Latin: politia (the Roman government)
see 'police'
police
fm. Old French, civil organisation
fm. Late Latin, politia (the Roman govt)
fm. Latin, 'the State'
fm. Greek, politeia
fm. polites, citizen
fm. polis, city-state
source | here
Politeia
- ancient Greek
- used in Greek political thought
- esp. Plato & Aristotle
fm. polis ('city-state')
Politeia range of meanings:
from 'the rights of citizens' to a 'form of government'
Politeia
ancient Greek government
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Aristotle
'Politics, Nicomachean Ethics, Constitution of Athens'
(& other works)
used Greek word for constitution (politeia) in several senses
simplest, most neutral descriptive:
'arrangement of offices in a polis (state)'
Source | here
Aristotle: Politics
'Nicomachean Ethics' (384-322 BCE)
happy life intended for man by nature:
one lived in accordance with virtue
'Politics'
ideal: community of 'virtuous citizens'
analysis of kinds of political community his time
- belief in the inferiority of women
describes role that politics & political community
must play in facilitating 'virtuous life' in citizenry
sees connection
re well-being of
political community + citizens
belief citizens must actively participate in politics
for happiness and virtue
analysis of what causes & prevents revolution
inspiration for many contemporary theorists
esp. those dissatisfied with liberal political philosophy
(liberal promoted by, eg. John Locke & John Stuart Mill)
http://www.iep.utm.edu/aris-pol/
Virtue Ethics
- one of x3 major approaches in normative ethics
- normative ethics - study of ethical action
- branch of philosophical ethics
- investigates set of questions arising when considering how one ought to act, morally speaking
attempt to provide a general theory
indicating how we ought to live
involves arriving at moral standards regulating 'right' & 'wrong' conduct
theories are abstract conceptual constructs
that attempt to describe & explain certain phenomena
normative ethical theories
represent systematic attempts
to describe and explain
moral or ethical phenomena
in normative ethical theories, possible to isolate
a tripartite structure
that comprises:
- a moral standard
- general moral principles
- particular moral principles and judgements
Moral Standard
moral standard provides the criteria
re generation of moral principles and moral judgements
ie. specifies what characteristics all moral actions must possesses
utilitarian moral standard:
actions are moral to the degree that
consequences produce most happiness
moral standards generate:
general moral principles
(in turn) general moral principles generate:
particular moral principles and judgements
MORAL STANDARD
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GENERAL MORAL PRINCIPLES
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PARTICULAR MORAL PRINCIPLES AND JUDGEMENTS
Figure 1. The Levels In Normative Moral Theories
particular moral standards distinguish normative theories
theories (whether scientific or ethical)
are all built on basic assumptions (conceptual foundations)
in science, assumptions = basic presuppositions re material universe
in ethical theories, basic assumptions regarding 'moral domain' (nature, structure, applications)
standards that underlie moral theories distinguished by basic assumptions re:
1. specific element (focused upon re 'moral evaluation')
2. definitions of 'good' and 'right'
3. if ethical knowledge based in experience or reason (or combination)
distinguish between elements:
1. motive
2. intention
3. character
4. action
5. characteristics (eg obligation, permissible, impermissible action)
6. consequences
*motive & intention are technically subtle difference (& problematic)
DUTY / OBLIGATION - 'right' prior to 'good'
Deontological ethics
normative ethical position
judges morality of action
based on action's adherence to a rule (or rules)
says: some acts are inherently 'moral' or 'immoral'
says: reason, intuition or 'moral' sense reveals what is 'right'
says: own interests/happiness have no relevance ('duty' prevails)
says: 'moral' (ie 'right') = observe 'moral duties', 'right' intentions
END PURPOSE / ENDS - 'good' prior to 'right'
Teleology
belief phenomena are best explained in terms of purpose rather than cause
theory of morality that derives 'duty' or 'moral obligation' from what is 'good' or 'desirable' as an end to be achieved [britannica]
[Greek teleios, teleos, perfect, complete (from telos, end, result) [source: tfd]]
says: no acts are inherently 'moral' or 'immoral'
says: experience, rather than reason, reveals what is 'good'
says: own/other equal consideration, evaluation
says: 'moral' (ie 'good') = act to maximise happiness in end result action
SOURCE (predominantly)
http://www2.onu.edu/~m-dixon/handouts/ethical%20theories.html
[wikipedia & various other at start]
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DOWNLOAD - e-book
'Politics'
Aristotle
Translated by Benjamin Jowett
University of Adelaide, Australia
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COMMENT
Wow, that was fun.
Started off looking for maps of Egypt when Ramesses III was around, and it sort of evolved from there.
Not sure that I'm up for all that reading. And I'm not sure I like Aristotle. Women and slaves aren't the problem.
All that 'virtue' stuff sounds unpleasant to me. Is there a third way?
Quickly skimmed the philosophy of ethics info. Not sure I'll remember much of it. But I'm not that hung up on ethics, so it doesn't matter.
I'm inclined to think that you cannot have blanket ethics rules, because all things are not equal and each situation demands specific responses. I'm talking about affairs of the state types of situations (rather than everyday existence, which is probably automatic). That's my gut feeling, but I haven't really given this a whole heap of thought.
Also, I don't think 'nature' intended man to live in massive societies that consume and breed on a massive scale, and destroy nature for the enrichment of an elite few. But 'nature' probably doesn't 'intend' anything. Nature just is.
Might skim some of Aristotle's 'Politics' ... after I edit Ramesses III's GIF to my satisfaction, because it's an action that will result in greater good. And it's more fun. ;)
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