Aristotle’s
Nicomachean Ethics
(Trans. W.D.
Ross)
VI.3. Let us begin, then, from the beginning, and
discuss these states once more. Let it be assumed that the states by virtue of
which the soul possesses truth by way of affirmation or denial are five in
number, i.e. art, scientific knowledge, practical wisdom, philosophic wisdom,
intuitive reason; we do not include judgement and opinion because in these we
may be mistaken.
Now what scientific knowledge [episteme] is, if we are to speak
exactly and not follow mere similarities, is plain from what follows. We all
suppose that what we know is not even capable of being otherwise; of things
capable of being otherwise we do not know, when they have passed outside our
observation, whether they exist or not. Therefore the object of scientific
knowledge is of necessity. Therefore it is eternal; for things that are of
necessity in the unqualified sense are all eternal; and things that are eternal
are ungenerated and imperishable. Again, every
science is thought to be capable of being taught, and its object of being
learned. And all teaching starts from what is already known, as we maintain in
the Analytics also; for it proceeds sometimes through induction and sometimes
by syllogism. Now induction is the starting-point which knowledge even of the
universal presupposes, while syllogism proceeds from universals. There are
therefore starting-points from which syllogism proceeds, which are not reached
by syllogism; it is therefore by induction that they are acquired. Scientific
knowledge is, then, a state of capacity to demonstrate, and has the other
limiting characteristics which we specify in the Analytics, for it is when a
man believes in a certain way and the starting-points are known to him that he
has scientific knowledge, since if they are not better known to him than the
conclusion, he will have his knowledge only incidentally.
Let this, then, be taken as
our account of scientific knowledge.
VI.4. In the variable are
included both things made and things done; making [poesis] and acting [praxis] are different (for their nature we treat even the
discussions outside our school as reliable); so that the reasoned state of
capacity to act is different from the reasoned state of capacity to make. Hence
too they are not included one in the other; for neither is acting making nor is
making acting. Now since architecture is an art [techne]
and is essentially a reasoned state of capacity to make, and there is neither
any art that is not such a state nor any such state that is
not an art, art is identical with a state of capacity to make, involving
a true course of reasoning. All art is concerned with coming into being, i.e.
with contriving and considering how something may come into being which is
capable of either being or not being, and whose origin is in the maker and not
in the thing made; for art is concerned neither with things that are, or come
into being, by necessity, nor with things that do so in accordance with nature
(since these have their origin in themselves). Making and acting being
different, art must be a matter of making, not of acting. And in a sense chance
and art are concerned with the same objects; as Agathon
says, 'art loves chance and chance loves art'. Art, then, as has been is a
state concerned with making, involving a true course of reasoning, and lack of
art on the contrary is a state concerned with making, involving a false course
of reasoning; both are concerned with the variable.
VI.5. Regarding practical wisdom [phronesis]
we shall get at the truth by considering who are the
persons we credit with it. Now it is thought to be the mark of a man of
practical wisdom to be able to deliberate well about what is good and expedient
for himself, not in some particular respect, e.g. about what sorts of thing
conduce to health or to strength, but about what sorts of thing conduce to the
good life in general. This is shown by the fact that we credit men with
practical wisdom in some particular respect when they have calculated well with
a view to some good end which is one of those that are not the object of any
art. It follows that in the general sense also the man who is capable of
deliberating has practical wisdom. Now no one deliberates about things that are
invariable, nor about things that it is impossible for
him to do. Therefore, since scientific knowledge involves demonstration, but
there is no demonstration of things whose first principles are variable (for
all such things might actually be otherwise), and since it is impossible to
deliberate about things that are of necessity, practical wisdom cannot be
scientific knowledge nor art; not science because that which can be done is
capable of being otherwise, not art because action and making are different
kinds of thing. The remaining alternative, then, is that it is a true and
reasoned state of capacity to act with regard to the things that are good or
bad for man. For while making has an end other than itself, action cannot; for
good action itself is its end. It is for this reason that we think Pericles and
men like him have practical wisdom, viz. because they can see what is good for themselves and what is good for men in general; we consider
that those can do this who are good at managing households or states. (This is
why we call temperance (sophrosune) by this name; we
imply that it preserves one's practical wisdom (sozousa
tan phronsin). Now what it preserves is a judgement
of the kind we have described. For it is not any and every judgement that
pleasant and painful objects destroy and pervert, e.g. the judgement that the
triangle has or has not its angles equal to two right angles, but only
judgements about what is to be done. For the originating causes of the things
that are done consist in the end at which they are aimed; but the man who has
been ruined by pleasure or pain forthwith fails to see any such originating
cause -- to see that for the sake of this or because of this he ought to choose
and do whatever he chooses and does; for vice is destructive of the originating
cause of action.) Practical wisdom, then, must be a reasoned and true state of
capacity to act with regard to human goods. But further, while there is such a
thing as excellence in art, there is no such thing as excellence in practical
wisdom; and in art he who errs willingly is preferable, but in practical
wisdom, as in the virtues, he is the reverse. Plainly, then, practical wisdom
is a virtue and not an art. There being two parts of the soul that can follow a
course of reasoning, it must be the virtue of one of the two, i.e. of that part
which forms opinions; for opinion is about the variable and so is practical
wisdom. But yet it is not only a reasoned state; this is shown by the fact that
a state of that sort may forgotten but practical wisdom cannot.
VI.8. Political wisdom [politike]
and practical wisdom are the same state of mind, but their essence is not the same.
Of the wisdom concerned with the city, the practical wisdom which plays a controlling
part is legislative wisdom, while that which is related to this as particulars
to their universal is known by the general name 'political wisdom'; this has to
do with action and deliberation, for a decree is a thing to be carried out in
the form of an individual act. This is why the exponents of this art are alone
said to 'take part in politics'; for these alone 'do things' as manual labourers 'do things'.
Practical
wisdom also is identified especially with that form of it which is concerned
with a man himself -- with the individual; and this is known by the general
name 'practical wisdom'; of the other kinds one is called household management,
another legislation, the third politics, and of the latter one part is called
deliberative and the other judicial. Now knowing what is good for oneself will
be one kind of knowledge, but it is very different from the other kinds; and
the man who knows and concerns himself with his own interests is thought to
have practical wisdom, while politicians are thought to be busybodies; hence the
word of Euripides,
But how could I be wise, who might
at ease,
Numbered among the army's
multitude,
Have had an equal share?
For those
who aim too high and do too much.
Those who
think thus seek their own good, and consider that one ought to do so. From this
opinion, then, has come the view that such men have practical wisdom; yet
perhaps one's own good cannot exist without household management, nor without a form of government. Further, how one should
order one's own affairs is not clear and needs inquiry.
What has been
said is confirmed by the fact that while young men become geometricians and
mathematicians and wise in matters like these, it is thought that a young man
of practical wisdom cannot be found. The cause is that such wisdom is concerned
not only with universals but with particulars, which become familiar from
experience, but a young man has no experience, for it is length of time that
gives experience; indeed one might ask this question too, why a boy may become
a mathematician, but not a philosopher or a physicist. It is because the
objects of mathematics exist by abstraction, while the first principles of
these other subjects come from experience, and because young men have no
conviction about the latter but merely use the proper language, while the
essence of mathematical objects is plain enough to them?
Further, error
in deliberation may be either about the universal or about the particular; we
may fall to know either that all water that weighs heavy is bad, or that this
particular water weighs heavy.
That practical
wisdom is not scientific knowledge is evident; for it is, as has been said,
concerned with the ultimate particular fact, since the thing to be done is of
this nature. It is opposed, then, to intuitive reason; for intuitive reason is
of the limiting premises, for which no reason can be given, while practical
wisdom is concerned with the ultimate particular, which is the object not of
scientific knowledge but of perception -- not the perception of qualities
peculiar to one sense but a perception akin to that by which we perceive that
the particular figure before us is a triangle; for in that direction as well as
in that of the major premise there will be a limit. But this is rather
perception than practical wisdom, though it is another kind of perception than
that of the qualities peculiar to each sense.