Aristotle’s Mean in Politics and Religion

Author:

Stelios Spyridon1ORCID,Dotsi Alexia

Affiliation:

1. The National Technical University of Athens, School of Applied Mathematical and Physical Sciences, Department of Humanities, Social Sciences and Law, Athens, Greece

Abstract

In this paper, we investigate the political and religious projection of Aristotle’s Doctrine of the Mean. According to Aristotle and his virtue ethics theory, humans succeed the mean when they acknowledge in what they are physically inclined to. If someone knows towards where she is deviating, either in terms of exaggeration or understatement, then she can, at some point, achieve the mean as the end goal of ethical virtue. But what if these moral evaluations refer to collective processes, such as politics, culture and religion? In this case, the notion of “intermediate” could be paralleled with the notion of ‘optimized’. A way of locating the optimized point on the political or cultural public sphere is to acknowledge in what people are politically or culturally inclined to. This seems to be guided by their cultural traditions, political history and aims. In politics and modern democracies, the doctrine may be applied in virtues, such as justice. Excess in the administration of justice causes "witch hunts" and deficiency lawlessness. Respectively, in today’s religious-oriented societies - countries that could be ranked according to their religiosity – where there is little tolerance in their permissible cultural patterns, the application of Aristotle’s mean reveals interesting findings. More specifically, in the case of the virtue of honor, the excess may lead to honor crimes and deficiency to contempt.

Publisher

Dialogo Publishing House

Reference21 articles.

1. "[1] “Religion,” Merriam-webster, last modified September 20, 2021, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/religion.

2. [2] Hursthouse, Rosalind and Pettigrove, Glen. “Virtue Ethics,” The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Winter 2018 Edition), https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/win2018/entries/ethics-virtue/.

3. [3] Aristotle, Taylor C C W. Nicomachean Ethics. Books II-IV. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006.

4. [4] Idem, II, 1106a26–b28.

5. [5] Idem, II, 1220b26–30.

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