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George J. Irbe's
Favorite Quotes from Aristotle on Selected
Topics
What
did Aristotle say about:
Communism
Constitutions
Democracy
Note:
The source book for a quotation is indicated
by:
NE
for Nicomachean Ethics
POL for Politics
MET for Metaphysics
RHE for Rhetoric
SL for On the Soul
The
location of the start of a quotation is given by
the 'Berlin number' which designates, by
established convention, the consecutively numbered
pages of all of Aristotle's works in the original
Greek, and a line number on the page ('a' for left
and 'b' for right side of the page. The last name
of the translator of the quotation is also
indicated.
Communism
POL [1261b33] (Jowett) . . that which is
common to the greatest number has the least care
bestowed upon it. Every one thinks chiefly of his
own, hardly at all of the common interest; and only
when he is himself concerned as an individual. For
besides other considerations, everybody is more
inclined to neglect the duty which he expects
another to fulfill;
POL [1262a33] (Jowett) . . how strange
it is that Socrates, after having made the children
common, should hinder lovers from carnal
intercourse only, but should permit love and
familiarities between father and son or between
brother and brother, than which nothing can be more
unseemly, since even without them love of this sort
is improper. How strange, too, to forbid
intercourse for no other reason than the violence
of the pleasure, as though the relationship of
father and son or of brothers with one another made
no difference.
POL [1263a13] (Jowett) If they do not
share equally enjoyments and toils, those who labor
much and get little will necessarily complain of
those who labor little and receive or consume much.
But indeed there is always a difficulty in men
living together and having all human relations in
common, but especially in their having common
property.
POL [1263a25] (Jowett) Property should
be in a certain sense common, but, as a general
rule, private; for, when every one has a distinct
interest, men will not complain of one another, and
they will make more progress, because every one
will be attending to his own business.
POL [1263b12] (Jowett) No one, when men
have all things in common, will any longer set an
example of liberality or do any liberal action; for
liberality consists in the use which is made of
property. Such legislation may have a specious
appearance of benevolence; men readily listen to
it, and are easily induced to believe that in some
wonderful manner everybody will become everybody's
friend, especially when some one is heard
denouncing the evils now existing in states, suits
about contracts, convictions for perjury,
flatteries of rich men and the like, which are said
to arise out of the possession of private property.
These evils, however, are due to a very different
cause - the wickedness of human nature. Indeed, we
see that there is much more quarrelling among those
who have all things in common, though there are not
many of them when compared with the vast numbers
who have private property.
POL [1263b30] (Jowett) The error of
Socrates must be attributed to the false notion of
unity from which he starts. Unity there should be,
both of the family and of the state, but in some
respects only. For there is a point at which a
state may attain such a degree of unity as to be no
longer a state, or at which, without actually
ceasing to exist, it will become an inferior state,
like harmony passing into unison, or rhythm which
has been reduced to a single foot. The state, as I
was saying, is a plurality which should be united
and made into a community by education;
Constitutions
NE [1160a31] (Rackham, VIII, x, 1-3) Now
there are three forms of constitution, and also an
equal number of perversions or corruptions of those
forms. The constitutions are Kingship, Aristocracy,
and thirdly, a constitution based on a property
classification, which it seems appropriate to
describe as timocratic, although most people are
accustomed to speak of it merely as a
constitutional government or Republic. The best of
these constitutions is Kingship, and the worst
Timocracy. The perversion of Kingship is Tyranny.
Both are monarchies, but there is a very wide
difference between them: a tyrant studies his own
advantage, a king that of his subjects. For a
monarch is not a king if he does not possess
independent resources, and is not better supplied
with goods of every kind than his subjects; but a
ruler so situated lacks nothing, and therefore will
not study his own interests but those of his
subjects. (A king who is not independent of his
subjects [i.e., elected by them] will be
merely a sort of titular king). Tyranny is the
exact opposite in this respect, for the tyrant
pursues his own good. The inferiority of Tyranny
among the perversions is more evident than that of
Timocracy among the constitutions, for the opposite
of the best must be the worst.
When a change of constitution takes place,
Kingship passes into Tyranny, because Tyranny is
the bad form of monarchy, so that a bad king
becomes a tyrant. Aristocracy passes into Oligarchy
owing to badness in the rulers, who do not
distribute what the State has to offer according to
desert, but give all or most of its benefits to
themselves, and always assign the offices to the
same persons, because they set supreme value upon
riches; thus power is in the hands of a few bad
men, instead of being in the hands of the best men.
Timocracy passes into Democracy, there being an
affinity between them, inasmuch as the ideal of
Timocracy also is government by the mass of the
citizens, and within the property qualifications
all are equal. Democracy is the least bad of the
perversions, for it is only a very small deviation
from the constitutional form of government
[i.e. timocracy]. These are the commonest
ways in which revolutions occur in states, since
they involve the smallest change, and come about
most easily.
POL [1270b7] (Jowett) The Lacedaemonian
constitution is defective in another point; I mean
the Ephoralty. This magistracy has authority in the
highest matters, but the Ephors are chosen from the
whole people, and so the office is apt to fall into
the hands of very poor men, who, being badly off,
are open to bribes. There have been many examples
at Sparta of this evil in former times; and quite
recently, in the matter of the Andrians, certain of
the Ephors who were bribed did their best to ruin
the state. And so great and tyrannical is their
power, that even the kings have been compelled to
court them, so that, in this way as well together
with the royal office, the whole constitution has
deteriorated, and from being an aristocracy has
turned into a democracy. The Ephoralty certainly
does keep the state together; for the people are
contented when they have a share in the highest
office, and the result, whether due to the
legislator or to chance, has been advantageous. For
if a constitution is to be permanent, all the parts
of the state must wish that it should exist and the
same arrangements be maintained. This is the case
at Sparta, where the kings desire its permanence
because they have due honor in their own persons;
the nobles because they are represented in the
council of elders (for the office of elder is a
reward of virtue); and the people, because all are
eligible to the Ephoralty. The election of Ephors
out of the whole people is perfectly right, but
ought not to be carried on in the present fashion,
which is too childish. Again, they have the
decision of great causes, although they are quite
ordinary men, and therefore they should not
determine them merely on their own judgment, but
according to written rules, and to the laws.
POL [1272b26] (Jowett) . . all three
states - the Lacedaemonian, the Cretan, and the
Carthaginian - nearly resemble one another, and are
very different from any others. Many of the
Carthaginian institutions are excellent. The
superiority of their constitution is proved by the
fact that the common people remains loyal to the
constitution; the Carthaginians have never had any
rebellion worth speaking of, and have never been
under the rule of a tyrant.
POL [1273b36] (Jowett) As to Solon, he
is thought by some to have been a good legislator,
who put an end to the exclusiveness of the
oligarchy, emancipated the people, established the
ancient Athenian democracy, and harmonized the
different elements of the state. According to their
view, the council of Areopagus was an oligarchical
element, the elected magistracy, aristocratical,
and the courts of law, democratical. The truth
seems to be that the council and the elected
magistracy existed before the time of Solon, and
were retained by him, but that he formed the courts
of law out of all the citizens, thus creating the
democracy, which is the very reason why he is
sometimes blamed. For in giving the supreme power
to the law courts, which are elected by lot, he is
thought to have destroyed the non-democratic
element. When the law courts grew powerful, to
please the people who were now playing the tyrant
the old constitution was changed into the existing
democracy. Ephialtes and Pericles curtailed the
power of the Areopagus; Pericles also instituted
the payment of the juries, and thus every demagogue
in turn increased the power of the democracy until
it became what we now see.
POL [1276b29] (Jowett) . . one citizen
differs from another, but the salvation of the
community is the common business of them all. This
community is the constitution; the virtue of the
citizen must therefore be relative to the
constitution of which he is a member.
POL [1278b10] (Jowett) A constitution is
the arrangement of magistracies in a state,
especially of the highest of all. The government is
everywhere sovereign in the state, and the
constitution is in fact the government.
POL [1279a37] (Jowett) when the citizens
at large administer the state for the common
interest, the government is called by the generic
name - a constitution.
POL [1289a1] (Jowett) Any change of
government which has to be introduced should be one
which men, starting from their existing
constitutions, will be both willing and able to
adopt, since there is quite as much trouble in the
reformation of an old constitution as in the
establishment of a new one, just as to unlearn is
as hard as to learn.
POL [1289a14] (Jowett) . . the laws are,
and ought to be, relative to the constitution, and
not the constitution to the laws. A constitution is
the organization of offices in a state, and
determines what is to be the governing body, and
what is the end of each community. But laws are not
to be confounded with the principles of the
constitution; they are the rules according to which
the magistrates should administer the state, and
proceed against offenders.
POL [1295a35] (Jowett) . . if what was
said in the Ethics is true, that the happy
life is the life according to virtue lived without
impediment, and that virtue is a mean, then the
life which is in a mean, and in a mean attainable
by every one, must be the best. And the same
principles of virtue and vice are characteristic of
cities and of constitutions; for the constitution
is in a figure the life of the city.
POL [1307b2] (Jowett) The citizens begin
by giving up some part of the constitution, and so
with greater ease the government change something
else which is a little more important, until they
have undermined the whole fabric of the state.
POL [1307b40] (Jowett) In the first
place, then, men should guard against the beginning
of change, and in the second place they should not
rely upon the political devices of which I have
already spoken invented only to deceive the people,
for they are proved by experience to be
useless.
POL [1309b31] (Jowett) Oligarchy or
democracy, although a departure from the most
perfect form, may yet be a good enough government,
but if anyone attempts to push the principles of
either to an extreme, he will begin by spoiling the
government and end by having none at all. Wherefore
the legislator and the statesman ought to know what
democratic measures save and what destroy a
democracy, and what oligarchical measures save or
destroy an oligarchy. For neither the one nor the
other can exist or continue to exist unless both
rich and poor are included in it. If equality of
property is introduced the state must of necessity
take another form; for when by laws carried to
excess one or other element in the state is ruined,
the constitution is ruined.
POL [1310a12] (Jowett) . . that which
most contributes to the permanence of constitutions
is the adaptation of education to the form of
government, and yet in our own day this principle
is universally neglected. The best laws, though
sanctioned by every citizen of the state, will be
of no avail unless the young are trained by habit
and education in the spirit of the
constitution.
POL [1310a25] (Jowett) . . in
democracies of the more extreme type there has
arisen a false idea of freedom which is
contradictory to the true interests of the state.
For two principles are characteristic of democracy,
the government of the majority and freedom. Men
think that what is just is equal; and that equality
is the supremacy of the popular will; and that
freedom means the doing what a man likes. In such
democracies every one lives as he pleases, or in
the words of Euripides, 'according to his fancy.'
But this is all wrong; men should not think it
slavery to live according to the rule of the
constitution; for it is their salvation.
Democracy
POL [1290b18] (Jowett) . . the form of
government is a democracy when the free, who are
also poor and the majority, govern, and an
oligarchy when the rich and the noble govern, they
being at the same time few in number.
POL [1291b30] to [1292a37]
(Jowett) Of forms of democracy first comes that
which is said to be based strictly on equality. In
such a democracy the law says that it is just for
the poor to have no more advantage than the rich;
and that neither should be masters, but both equal.
For if liberty and equality, as is thought by some,
are chiefly to be found in democracy, they will be
best attained when all persons alike share in the
government to the utmost. And since the people are
the majority, and the opinion of the majority is
decisive, such a government must necessarily be a
democracy. Here then is one sort of democracy.
There is another, in which the magistrates are
elected according to a certain property
qualification, but a low one; he who has the
required amount of property has a share in the
government, but he who loses his property loses his
rights. Another kind is that in which all the
citizens who are under no disqualification share in
the government, but still the law is supreme. In
another, everybody, if he be only a citizen, is
admitted to the government, but the law is supreme
as before. A fifth form of democracy, in other
respects the same, is that in which, not the law,
but the multitude, have the supreme power, and
supersede the law by their decrees. This is a state
of affairs brought about by the demagogues. For in
democracies which are subject to the law the best
citizens hold the first place, and there are no
demagogues; but where the laws are not supreme,
there demagogues spring up. For the people becomes
a monarch, and is many in one; and the many have
the power in their hands, not as individuals, but
collectively. Homer says that 'it is not good to
have a rule of many,' but whether he means this
corporate rule, or the rule of many individuals, is
uncertain. At all events this sort of democracy,
which is now a monarch, and no longer under the
control of law, seeks to exercise monarchical sway,
and grows into a despot; the flatterer is held in
honor; this sort of democracy being relatively to
other democracies what tyranny is to other forms of
monarchy. The spirit of both is the same, and they
alike exercise a despotic rule over the better
citizens. The decrees of the demos correspond to
the edicts of the tyrant; and the demagogue is to
the one what the flatterer is to the other. Both
have great power - the flatterer with the tyrant,
the demagogue with democracies of the kind which we
are describing. The demagogues make the decrees of
the people override the laws, by referring all
things to the popular assembly. And therefore they
grow great, because the people have all things in
their hands, and they hold in their hands the votes
of the people, who are too ready to listen to them.
Further, those who have any complaint to bring
against the magistrates say, 'Let the people be
judges'; the people are too happy to accept the
invitation; and so the authority of every office is
undermined. Such a democracy is fairly open to the
objection that it is not a constitution at all; for
where the laws have no authority, there is no
constitution. The law ought to be supreme over all,
and the magistracies should judge of particulars,
and only this should be considered a constitution.
So that if democracy be a real form of government,
the sort of system in which all things are
regulated by decrees is clearly not even a
democracy in the true sense of the word, for
decrees relate only to particulars.
POL [1301a28] (Jowett) Democracy, for
example, arises out of the notion that those who
are equal in any respect are equal in all respects;
because men are equally free, they claim to be
absolutely equal.
POL [1302a8] (Jowett) . . democracy
appears to be safer and less liable to revolution
than oligarchy. For in oligarchies there is the
double danger of the oligarchs falling out among
themselves and also with the people; but in
democracies there is only the danger of a quarrel
with the oligarchs. No dissension worth mentioning
arises among the people themselves. And we may
further remark that a government which is composed
of the middle class more nearly approximates to
democracy than to oligarchy, and is the safest of
the imperfect forms of government.
POL [1309b31] (Jowett) Oligarchy or
democracy, although a departure from the most
perfect form, may yet be a good enough government,
but if anyone attempts to push the principles of
either to an extreme, he will begin by spoiling the
government and end by having none at all. Wherefore
the legislator and the statesman ought to know what
democratic measures save and what destroy a
democracy, and what oligarchical measures save or
destroy an oligarchy. For neither the one nor the
other can exist or continue to exist unless both
rich and poor are included in it. If equality of
property is introduced the state must of necessity
take another form; for when by laws carried to
excess one or other element in the state is ruined,
the constitution is ruined.
POL [1310a2] (Jowett) There is an error
common to both oligarchies and to democracies: in
the latter the demagogues, when the multitude are
above the law, are always cutting the city in two
by quarrels with the rich, whereas they should
always profess to be maintaining their cause; just
as in oligarchies the oligarchs should profess to
maintain the cause of the people, . .
POL [1310a25] (Jowett) . . in
democracies of the more extreme type there has
arisen a false idea of freedom which is
contradictory to the true interests of the state.
For two principles are characteristic of democracy,
the government of the majority and freedom. Men
think that what is just is equal; and that equality
is the supremacy of the popular will; and that
freedom means the doing what a man likes. In such
democracies every one lives as he pleases, or in
the words of Euripides, 'according to his fancy.'
But this is all wrong; men should not think it
slavery to live according to the rule of the
constitution; for it is their salvation.
POL [1317a40] &endash; [1318a10]
(Jowett) The basis of a democratic state is
liberty; which, according to the common opinion of
men, can only be enjoyed in such a state; this they
affirm to be the great end of every democracy. One
principle of liberty is for all to rule and be
ruled in turn, and indeed democratic justice is the
application of numerical not proportionate
equality; whence it follows that the majority must
be supreme, and that whatever the majority approve
must be the end and the just. Every citizen, it is
said, must have equality, and therefore in a
democracy the poor have more power than the rich,
because there are more of them, and the will of the
majority is supreme. This, then, is one note of
liberty which all democrats affirm to be the
principle of their state. Another is that a man
should live as he likes. This, they say, is the
privilege of a freeman, since, on the other hand,
not to live as a man likes is the mark of a slave.
This is the second characteristic of democracy,
whence has arisen the claim of men to be ruled by
none, if possible, or, if this is impossible, to
rule and be ruled in turns; and so it contributes
to the freedom based upon equality.
Such being our foundation and such the principle
from which we start, the characteristics of
democracy are as follows: the election of officers
by all out of all; and that all should rule over
each, and each in his turn over all; that the
appointment to all offices, or to all but those
which require experience and skill, should be made
by lot; that no property qualification should be
required for offices, or only a very low one; that
a man should not hold the same office twice, or not
often, or in the case of few except military
offices: that the tenure of all offices, or of as
many as possible, should be brief, that all men
should sit in judgment, or that judges selected out
of all should judge, in all matters, or in most and
in the greatest and most important - such as the
scrutiny of accounts, the constitution, and private
contracts; that the assembly should be supreme over
all causes, or at any rate over the most important,
and the magistrates over none or only over a very
few. Of all magistracies, a council is the most
democratic when there is not the means of paying
all the citizens, but when they are paid even this
is robbed of its power; for the people then draw
all cases to themselves, as I said in the previous
discussion. The next characteristic of democracy is
payment for services; assembly, law courts,
magistrates, everybody receives pay, when it is to
be had; or when it is not to be had for all, then
it is given to the law-courts and to the stated
assemblies, to the council and to the magistrates,
or at least to any of them who are compelled to
have their meals together. And whereas oligarchy is
characterized by birth, wealth, and education, the
notes of democracy appear to be the opposite of
these - low birth, poverty, mean employment.
Another note is that no magistracy is perpetual,
but if any such have survived some ancient change
in the constitution it should be stripped of its
power, and the holders should be elected by lot and
no longer by vote. These are the points common to
all democracies; but democracy and demos in their
truest form are based upon the recognized principle
of democratic justice, that all should count
equally; for equality implies that the poor should
have no more share in the government than the rich,
and should not be the only rulers, but that all
should rule equally according to their numbers. And
in this way men think that they will secure
equality and freedom in their state.
POL [1318b39] (Jowett) Every man should
be responsible to others, nor should anyone be
allowed to do just as he pleases; for where
absolute freedom is allowed there is nothing to
restrain the evil which is inherent in every man.
But the principle of responsibility secures that
which is the greatest good in states; the right
persons rule and are prevented from doing wrong,
and the people have their due. It is evident that
this is the best kind of democracy, and why?
because the people are drawn from a certain
class.
POL [1319b2] (Jowett) The last form of
democracy, that in which all share alike, is one
which cannot be borne by all states, and will not
last long unless well regulated by laws and
customs. The more general causes which tend to
destroy this or other kinds of government have been
pretty fully considered. In order to constitute
such a democracy and strengthen the people, the
leaders have been in the habit including as many as
they can, and making citizens not only of those who
are legitimate, but even of the illegitimate, and
of those who have only one parent a citizen,
whether father or mother; for nothing of this sort
comes amiss to such a democracy. This is the way in
which demagogues proceed. Whereas the right thing
would be to make no more additions when the number
of the commonalty exceeds that of the notables and
of the middle class - beyond this not to go. When
in excess of this point, the constitution becomes
disorderly, and the notables grow excited and
impatient of the democracy, as in the insurrection
at Cyrene; for no notice is taken of a little evil,
but when it increases it strikes the eye. Measures
like those which Cleisthenes passed when he wanted
to increase the power of the democracy at Athens,
or such as were taken by the founders of popular
government at Cyrene, are useful in the extreme
form of democracy. Fresh tribes and brotherhoods
should be established; the private rites of
families should be restricted and converted into
public ones; in short, every contrivance should be
adopted which will mingle the citizens with one
another and get rid of old connections. Again, the
measures which are taken by tyrants appear all of
them to be democratic; such, for instance, as the
license permitted to slaves (which may be to a
certain extent advantageous) and also that of women
and children, and the allowing everybody to live as
he likes. Such a government will have many
supporters, for most persons would rather live in a
disorderly than in a sober manner.
POL [1320a29] (Jowett) Where there are
revenues the demagogues should not be allowed after
their manner to distribute the surplus; the poor
are always receiving and always wanting more and
more, for such help is like water poured into a
leaky cask. Yet the true friend of the people
should see that they be not too poor, for extreme
poverty lowers the character of the democracy;
measures therefore should be taken which will give
them lasting prosperity; and as this is equally the
interest of all classes, the proceeds of the public
revenues should be accumulated and distributed
among its poor, if possible, in such quantities as
may enable them to purchase a little farm, or, at
any rate, make a beginning in trade or
husbandry.
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