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Aristotle on Political Community

Aristotle on Political Community

Aristotle on Political Community

David J. Riesbeck, Rice University, Houston
August 2016
Hardback
9781107107021
AUD$163.59
exc GST
Hardback
USD
eBook

    Aristotle's claims that 'man is a political animal' and that political community 'exists for the sake of living well' have frequently been celebrated by thinkers of divergent political persuasions. The details of his political philosophy, however, have often been regarded as outmoded, contradictory, or pernicious. This book takes on the major problems that arise in attempting to understand how the central pieces of Aristotle's political thought fit together: can a conception of politics that seems fundamentally inclusive and egalitarian be reconciled with a vision of justice that seems uncompromisingly hierarchical and authoritarian? Riesbeck argues that Aristotle's ideas about the distinctive nature and value of political community, political authority, and political participation are coherent and consistent with his aristocratic standards of justice. The result is a theory that, while not free of problems, remains a potentially fruitful resource for contemporary thinking about the persistent problems of political life.

    • Develops and defends a distinctive interpretation of Aristotle's view of the nature and value of political community
    • Seeks to understand Aristotle on his own terms while deploying the conceptual and argumentative tools of contemporary analytic history of philosophy
    • Presents an interpretation of Aristotle that transcends recent debates among liberal, communitarian and republican-inspired readings

    Product details

    September 2016
    Adobe eBook Reader
    9781316723135
    0 pages
    0kg
    This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction: community and exclusion
    • 1. Paradoxes of monarchy
    • 2. Community, friendship, and justice
    • 3. From the household to the city
    • 4. Rule and justice in the household and the city
    • 5. Citizenship, constitutions, and political justice
    • 6. Kingship as political rule and political community
    • Conclusion: ruling and being ruled.
      Author
    • David J. Riesbeck , Rice University, Houston

      David J. Riesbeck earned his PhD from the Joint Classics and Philosophy Graduate Program in Ancient Philosophy at the University of Texas, Austin. He has taught at the University of Texas, Dartmouth College and Rice University. His articles and reviews have appeared in Ancient Philosophy, Apeiron, the Bryn Mawr Classical Review, Classical Quarterly, Phoenix and Reason Papers.