Book I

E427102

Book I of Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics introduces the work’s central inquiry into the nature of human happiness (eudaimonia) and the highest good.

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Label Occurrences
Book I canonical 1

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Statements (46)

Predicate Object
instanceOf philosophical text section
addresses the appropriate level of precision in ethical arguments
argues every action and choice aims at some good
political science is the architectonic science ordering other sciences toward the good
the good for a human must be related to the human function (ergon)
the highest good is self-sufficient and final
the human function involves rational activity
there is a highest good that is desired for its own sake
author Aristotle NERFINISHED
characterizes eudaimonia as living well and doing well
claims goods of the soul are the most important for happiness
concludes human happiness is an activity of soul in accordance with virtue
criticizes the life devoted to honor as the highest good
the life devoted to pleasure as the highest good
the life devoted to wealth as the highest good
defines eudaimonia as the ultimate end of human life
the highest good as that at which all actions aim
discusses the need for a complete life to judge happiness
the role of fortune in happiness
distinguishes external goods
goods of the body
goods of the soul
examines popular opinions about happiness
the Platonic Form of the Good NERFINISHED
field ethics
moral philosophy
genre ancient Greek ethical treatise
influenced later virtue ethics traditions
medieval scholastic moral philosophy
modern discussions of well-being
intendedAudience students of politics and ethics
introducedIn 4th century BCE
mainTopic eudaimonia
human happiness
the highest good
partOf Nicomachean Ethics NERFINISHED
positionInWork first book of the Nicomachean Ethics
purpose to establish a general account of happiness as the end of human life
to frame the central question of what the human good is
rejects a single universal Form of the Good as practically useless for ethics
relatedConcept function (ergon)
political science as master science
virtue (arete)
states ethical inquiry must be imprecise and suited to its subject matter
traditionallyNumberedAs Book I of ten books in the Nicomachean Ethics
workInLanguage Ancient Greek

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Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.