Lecture 10 Notes

Aristotle on Friendship

 

Plan of the Lecture

I.    Philosophical Problems and Puzzles
II.   A First Crack at Some Answers
III.  Types of Friendship
IV.  Equality and Friendship

I.    Philosophical Problems and Puzzles

A.   There are Many Kinds of Friendships

  • The different kinds of friendships include: teammates, roommates, men and women who are in love (inc. husband and wife) drinking companions/fellow partiers parents and children, business friendship, and evil doers.
  • Are all of these alike or do we need distinctions?

B.   Must Friends All Be Alike?

  • If friends must be alike, in what respect must they be alike?
  • Can we find real friendship with those quite different?

C.   Love is Central To Friendship

  • What is love?  Is it infatuation, or sentimentality, or a spirit of cooperation?
  • What are its limits?  Are there limits to whom or what we can love?

II.   A First Crack at Some Answers

  • Three Aspects of Friendship

  1. Love essential to friendship.  to learn the nature of friendship, we must look at objects of love and the reasons for love Three reasons for loving something/someone include: good, pleasurable, and useful.
  2. Friends want good things for each other.
  3. Friendship is found only when it is mutual and mutually known that A wishes B well and B wishes A well, and A knows that B wishes her well and B knows that A wishes her well.

 

  • "To be friends, then they must be mutually recognized as bearing goodwill and wishing well to each other for [reasons of good, pleasure or utility]” (VIII.2)

III.   Types of Friendship (Chapters 3 and 4)

A.   Love is the Essential Motive for Friendship

  1. Friendships of utility. In this case, friends love one another for sake of what is good for themselves.  What do you think this means, exactly?  Can you think of any examples?
  2. Friendships based on what is pleasurable.  What do you think Aristotle has in mind here?
  3. Friendships in which friends love each other for their virtue, their good character.

B.    An Important Qualification

C.    Type (3) is the Best Kind of Friendship

D.    Implications

E.  A Few Important Questions:

F.   A Few Important Notes:

"On the other hand the friendship of young people seems to aim at pleasure; for they live under the guidance of emotion, and pursue above all what is pleasant to themselves and what is immediately before them .. This is why they quickly become friends and quickly cease to be so; their friendship changes with the object that is found pleasant, and such pleasure alters quickly. Young people are amorous, too; for the greater part of the friendship depends on emotion and aims at pleasure; this is why they fall in love and quickly fall out of love, changing often within a single day." (VIII.3)

 

IV.   Equality and Friendship

A.   Recall the question raised at the outset.

B.   Features of False Friendship

  1. In friendships based on pleasure, friends seek relaxation, a good time, or excitement in each other.
  2. In friendships based on utility, friends seek whatever else they seek through their friendship.  In the modern idiom, friends are merely means and not ends.

C.   Features of True Friendship

 

Citation: Weithman, P. (2006, September 19). Lecture 10 Notes. Retrieved November 23, 2009, from Notre Dame OpenCourseWare Web site: http://ocw.nd.edu/philosophy/introduction-to-philosophy/lectures/lecture-10-notes.
Copyright 2009, by the Contributing Authors. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License. Creative Commons License