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3 ideas
5866 | It is folly not to order one's life around some end [Aristotle] |
Full Idea: Not to have ordered one's life in relation to some end is a mark of extreme folly. | |
From: Aristotle (Eudemian Ethics [c.333 BCE], 1214b10) | |
A reaction: A most interesting claim, not found in the Nichomachean Ethics. There the teleology is descriptive, but here it is prescriptive. It is tempting to rebel against Aristotle's injuncture. He was a driven workaholic. Why not float through life like gossamer? |
5878 | Eyes could be used for a natural purpose, or for unnatural seeing, or for a non-seeing activity [Aristotle] |
Full Idea: One might wonder if it is possible to use each thing both for its natural purpose and otherwise - and that as itself or incidentally. E.g. twisting an eye so that one thing appears two, but also using an eye as something to sell or eat. | |
From: Aristotle (Eudemian Ethics [c.333 BCE], 1246a26) | |
A reaction: The important idea here is the core notion that there is a 'natural' purpose. Sceptics might say that all purposes derive from how a mind wishes to use something; otherwise there would be processes, but no 'functions' or 'purposes'. |
5873 | Each thing's function is its end [Aristotle] |
Full Idea: Each thing's function is its end. | |
From: Aristotle (Eudemian Ethics [c.333 BCE], 1219a08) | |
A reaction: Function and end are not the same, but this confirms how closely related they are for Aristotle. Can an inanimate object have an end, without having any apparent function? Could I construct a set of cogwheels which each had a function, but no end? |