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Title: Aristotle doctrine that


1
Aristotle doctrine that Man is by Nature a Zoon
Politikon
2
  • a) Richard Mulgan, Aristotles Political Theory
    chs. 12.
  • b) Bernard Yack, Community and Conflict... pp.
    92-103.
  • c) Wolfgang Kullman, Man as a Political Animal
    in Keyt and Miller.
  • d) Hannah Arendt, The Human Condition 7-37.
  • Aristotle - 1253a1-15.

3
  • 1. Zoon
  • ???? transliterated as zoon includes all
    living beings, men, animals and Gods.
  • Some common mistakes even by famous philosophers
  • A. Giorgio Agamben in Homo Sacer argues that
    Aristotle conceives of human animal life this
    sense (zoe), and distinguishes it from mans
    political and ethical life (bios). Agamben
    interprets (zoe), as simple natural life la
    semplice vita naturale and explains that this
    kind of life mere living was excluded from the
    polis and confined to the oikos or household,
    which was a sphere concerned exclusively with
    reproduction riproduzione and subsistence
    sussistenza. This is the meaning he
    subsequently assigns to bare life la nuda
    vita.

4
  • Zoon mans natural existence, or the social
    existence of the polis existence by nature
    where this expression does not refer to (but
    specifically) excludes the teleological meaning
    of nature.
  • The instinctual basis of the polis desire for
    companionship.
  • The metaphysical/reproductive basis of the polis.
  • The drive for self-preservation.
  • The economic and material basis of the polis.

5
  • B. Martin Heidegger interprets the phrase
    politikon zoon as a reference to mans animal
    existence.
  • Martin Heidegger, On Humanism, 1949, p13
  • We must be clear that human beings in the final
    analysis are enclosed in the sphere of animal
    being (animalitas), even if he is not equated
    with beasts, but is given a specific difference.
    In principle one must always think of the homo
    animalisthis positioning is a kind of
    metaphysics.
  • So Heidegger thinks that mans status as a zoon,
    marks him out as an animal.

6
  • However, zoon/zoe is not a pejorative
    designation. It means ensouled being or living
    being in a wide and non-pejorative sense, which
    excludes only plants, but includes animals and
    Gods. (Animal by contrast, in the Roman and
    Christian traditions is pejorative.)
  • C. As Hans Jonas puts it ???? does not mean
    animal ( bestia), but every ensouled ( living)
    being, excluding plants but including demons,
    Gods, ensouled stars, indeed the ensouled
    universe as the greatest and most perfect living
    being itself. (Hans Jonas, Zwischen Nichts und
    Ewigkeit. Zur Lehre vom Menachen cited in
    Günther Bien, Die Grundlegung der Politischen
    Philosophie bei Aristoteles, Freiburg, Karl
    Alber, 1973, p. 123.)

7
  • Remember the sphere of human existence or
    properly human affairs in which politics and
    ethics have their proper place, like human
    existence itself, is demarcated from above and
    from below, suspended between the divine (the
    life of the Gods and the heavenly bodies) and the
    animal.
  • So Aristotle means it literally when he says that
    he who is by nature and not by luck without a
    polis is either a bad man, or above all men.
    1252a3
  • Humans as living beings share some features of
    their existence with animals/beasts, and some
    with Gods.

8
  • Politikon
  • It is commonly claimed that Aristotle define the
    human beings as a Zoon Politikon.
  • Lets take some famous examples.
  • A. Michel Foucault, History of Sexuality vol.
    III, p. 188
  • Ever since Aristotle defined man as a
    political animal modern man is an animal
    whose politics calls his existence as a living
    being into question.

9
  • B. Hannah Arendt
  • Aristotles definition of man as a zoon
    politikon was not only unrelated and even opposed
    to the natural association experienced in
    household life it can be fully understood only
    if one adds his second famous definition of man
    as a zoon logon ekhon. Hannah Arendt, The Human
    Condition, Chicago, 1954, p. 27
  • N.B. The only opposition here is that the life
    of citizens sharing in the constitution that is
    ruling and being ruled in turn and hence
    participating in a just political order, is
    opposed to the natural hierarchies of the
    household master/(natural) slave, and man woman,
    which are based on instinct, affection and exist
    for the purpose of survival and economic and
    material need.

10
  • Aristotle is not claiming that the social glue
    that cements the family plays not role in
    cementing the political community.
  • He claims that it is necessary but not
    sufficient to do this, in addition to all this
    one needs a constitution, laws, a just political
    order.
  • There is no opposition as such between the bases
    of natural association (that are sufficient for
    family ties) and the bases of political order.

11
  • Still Arendt implies that Aristotle has several
    definitions of man/human being/ and she is right
    about this.
  • Aristotle offers lots of other much better
    candidate definitions of man.
  • Man is the only animal who can speak.
  • Man is the only animal who can deliberate and
    decide.
  • Man is the only animal who can act.
  • Man is the only animal who can count.
  • Man is the only animal who can remember.
  • Man is the only animal who can do science.

12
  • In his biological writings, Aristotle notes that
    there are several different kinds of political
    animal.
  • In History of the Animals he distinguishes
    between gregarious animals ton angelaion and
    solitary animals ton monadikon.
  • Some gregarious animals, (not those that herd or
    flock together or swim together in shoals) are
    political animals
  • Animals that live politically are those that
    have any kind of activity in common, which is not
    true of all gregarious animals. Of this sort are
    man, bee, wasp and crane. Aristotle, (HA 1.1.
    487 b33ff)
  • Political as a biological attribute and
    differentium of a small sub-class of gregarious
    animals, including human beings but not limited
    to them.

13
  • Look again at Aristotles supposed definition
    of man in Book I of The Politics
  • It is clear that man is a political animal more
    than any bee or any gregarious animal. Aristotle,
    (Politics, 1253a7 my emphasis.
  • The specific difference that determines the
    genus of political animals, insofar as Aristotle
    canvasses one, is that human beings have
    logos.2 Aristotles claims that
  • man is the only animal who has speech/reason
    logon de monon anthropos ekhei ton zoon
    (1253a9).
  • Man is thE only animal with a sense of justice.
  • (See also 1334b15 where Aristotle claims that
    both reason logos and intellection nous are
    the end toward which nature strives emintes
    phuseos telos, so that birth and education in
    customs should be ordered with a view to them.)

14
  • speechserves to make clear what is beneficial
    and what is harmful, and so also what is just and
    unjust. For by contrast with the other animals
    ta alla zoa he alone can perceive what is good
    and bad, and just and unjust) Politics
    (1251a16-19) See also Politics 1332b5. Man and
    man alone has reason monos gar echei logon.
  • the virtue of justice dikaiosune is what is
    political, and justice dike is the basis on
    which the political association is ordered, and
    the virtue of justice is a judgement about what
    is just. (1253a33-5)

15
  • Mulgan versus Kullmann
  • Richard Mulgan. p. 24
  • 1. The political animal, in the narrow sense,
    means the polis-animal.
  • Mulgan claims this is its literal meaning.
  • 2. Aristotle uses the term in the wider sense of
    social animal to denote any species which
    co-operates in a common enterprise. Calls this
    its metaphorical meaning.
  • 3. Aristotle unsuccessfully tries to align both
    meanings at 1253 a1-15 with the claim that man
    is more of a political animal than a bee or any
    other gregarious animal.
  • What he should have said is that other animals
    in a metaphorical sense only whereas man is
    political in a literal sense too.

16
  • 4. Mulgan suggests that the proposition, Man is
    a political animal is a premise, which is to be
    used to prove that the polis is natural. p.24.
  • The mistake he diagnoses is that Aristotle only
    shows the biological basis of mans social
    nature, not that this society and state must be
    of the polis-type. Mulgan, p.25.
  • Look at the text. The proposition is presented
    not as the premise but as a conclusion of
    argument, which shows first, that the polis
    exists by nature, and that man is a political
    animal.
  • Hence it clearly follows that the state exists
    by nature, and that man is a political animal.
    1253a1
  • 5. Mulgan In order to do this Aristotle has to
    make unwarranted claims of biological
    universality for values which are, at least in
    part, peculiar to one social context. p. 25
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