Aristotle belongs to the small class of philosophers who were not only influential in a particular field of philosophy but also shaped the profile of every philosophical discipline. In this book Otfried Höffe provides a comprehensive introduction to the life and work of Aristotle, covering well-known Aristotelian topics such as ethics, politics, and metaphysics as well as the less familiar, such as biology, psychology, and rhetoric. Höffe also compares Aristotle to other major figures in the history of European (especially German) philosophy, making connections to Kant and Hegel that are particularly insightful. A picture of Aristotle emerges as a philosopher who is much more modern than previously thought, one whose writings are still relevant today and continue to make valuable contributions to many contemporary philosophical debates.
Tabla de materias
List of Illustrations
List of Abbreviations and Method of Citation
Preface
PART I: ‘THE PHILOSOPHER’?
1. The Man and His Work
1.1 The Man
1.2 The Work
2. Researcher, Scholar, and Philosopher
PART II: KNOWLEDGE AND SCIENCE
3. The Phenomenology of Knowledge
3.1 Propaedeutic?
3.2 An Epistemic Hierarchy
3.3 Freedom and Self-realization
4. Forms of Rationality
4.1 Syllogistics
4.2 Dialectic (Topics)
4.3 Rhetoric
4.4 Poetics: Tragedy
5. Proofs and Principles
5.1 A Critique of Demonstrative Reason
5.2 Axioms and Other Principles
5.3 Induction and Mind
6. Four Methodical Maxims
6.1 Establishing the Phenomena
6.2 Doctrines
6.3 Difficulties
6.4 Linguistic Analysis
PART III: PHYSICS AND METAPHYSICS
7. Natural Philosophy
7.1 Aristotelian Natural Science
7.2 Motion
7.3 The Four Causes
7.4 Continuum, the Infinite, Place, and Time
8. Biology and Psychology
8.1 Aristotle the Zoologist
8.2 Teleonomy: Organisms, Procreation, and Heredity
8.3 The Soul
9. First Philosophy, or Metaphysics
10. Cosmology and Theology
10.1 Meta-physics
10.2 The Cosmological Concept of God
10.3 An Ethical Concept of God?
11. Ontology and Language
11.1 Categories
11.2 Substance
11.3 Aristotle’s Critique of Plato’s Ideas
11.4 On Language
PART IV: ETHICS AND POLITICS
12. Practical Philosophy
12.1 The Autonomy of Ethics
12.2 The Goal Is Action
12.3 Outline Knowledge
13. Theory of Action
13.1 The Basic Concept of Desire
13.2 Decision and Power of Judgment
13.3 Weakness of the Will
13.4 Does Aristotle Know the Concept of Will?
14. The Good Life
14.1 The Principle of Happiness
14.2 The Virtues of Character
14.3 Justice, Natural Law, and Equity
14.4 Theoretical or Political Existence?
15. Political Anthropology
15.1 The Relevance of the Politics
15.2 ‘Political by Nature’
15.3 Friendship and Other Prerequisites
16. Political Justice
16.1 Elementary Inequalities
16.2 Rule of the Free over the Free
16.3 Democracy or Polity?
PART V: The RECEPTION
17. Antiquity and the Middle Ages
17.1 Antiquity
17.2 Christianity, Islam, and Judaism
17.3 The Great Aristotelian Renaissance
18. The Modern Age and the Present
18.1 Detachment and Renewed Interest
18.2 Aristotle Research and Neo-Aristotelianisms
Chronology
Bibliography
Index of Personal Names
General Index
Sobre el autor
Otfried Höffe is Professor and Chair of Philosophy at the University of Tübingen and the author of many books, including
Immanuel Kant, also published by SUNY Press.