Aristotle's Politics and political
theory
This is a summary of CCW Taylor's chapter 'Politics' in The Cambridge Companion to Aristotle.
A BIG PROBLEM: ARISTOTLE'S VIEW OF SLAVERY
First of all, let's talk about slavery.
Taylor leaves that 'til last, but I think we should get it out of
the way so we are not left with a bad taste in our mouths, so to
speak.
Aristotle's attempts to justify
slavery are perhaps the most notoriously distasteful parts of his
political philosophy. He uses two analogies: tools and draught
animals. He felt that slaves need masters for their own good and
masters need slaves for their own good. It is not clear why a
slave needs a master. On the tool analogy, the tool needs someone
to keep it sharp and functional. But that is for the tool's good
only insofar as a tool's good coincides with that of its user, the
master. A tool's whole definition is in terms of the user and the
user's benefit, not its own benefit. Tools are parasitic things.
The slave's own good, qua human, seems not at all served by being
a slave. Aristotle tries to claim that there are people who are
simply incapable of deliberation. But if there are, why is it
better for them to be
slaves: draught animals are not better off as animals because they
slave away for their masters, are they? How is it in the interest
of the ox to be yoked to a plough?
It is just implausible that there are that many mental defectives
to serve as slaves. And what is more, it is implausible that they
should serve as slaves
for their own good.
There is an argument that by being enslaved, they make a
contribution to the common good that they would not otherwise
make, and so they are benefited by being made to do benefit. That
amounts to the claim that the interest of the slave is wholly, or
significantly, determined by the interest of the master, or the
collective good, or some collective good.
Aristotle suggests that there is an identity of interest, and so
there is a sort of friendship between slave and master. But if
there is to be friendship, the slave must be human, not subhuman,
and there are no fully human humans who are fit to be slaves
according to Aristotle. So slaves and masters cannot be friends.
All of that adds up to the following: Aristotle was not only wrong
about slavery, but he should have known it!
One thing to note: the value we place on autonomy
(autonomy is basically the value of independent deliberation and
decisions: it explains things like that the fact that my mistakes
may be mistakes, but that they are MY mistakes is valuable to me,
and that the good I do doesn't really count if I do it under orders
from another, does it)
it is clear that ancients were concerned about what we might
call autonomy, but it is not clear that they theorized it as a
concept in its own right.
GENERAL MATTERS
Aristotle's ethical and political treatises form a unity:
they are not separable in the way that many modern discussions of
political theory are separable from discussions of ethical theory.
That is because, according to Aristotle, both ethics and politics are practical
enterprises which both aim at determining what the good life for a
human being is and pursuing it. Politics is about the
aspects of the good life that arise as a consequence of the
fact that human beings' natures can only be fully developed within
the community called a polis, while ethics is about
other aspects of the good life. Aristotle does not speak of
the limits and extent of the authority of the state exercising
coercive force on its members (i.e. of the balance between
liberty and coercion) as political scientists of today do.
Rather, he thinks the human good is the fundamental goal of the
state (or ought to be) and the citizens' participation
in government is partially constitutive of the activity that is
the human good.
Aristotle's view of the good life can be seen in terms of activity in widening circles:
first, one's activity in the circle of one's own person,
then one's household, then one's polis.
Many virtues require interaction with others, such as generosity,
temperance, justice. Political activity is the broadest stage on
which virtue can unfold (today, we would perhaps add "national" and
"global" circles, but the principles might remain the same).
Although Aristotle knew of other political entities, such as
kingdoms, empires, etc., he held that the polis was the arena in
which human potential for excellence could most fully unfold.
Aristotle says that the polis comes to be for the sake not just
of survival, reproduction, self-sufficiency, etc., but rather for
the good life.
POLIS?
The notion of the polis as the
natural end of political organizations and that humans are naturally suited for polis
life is problematic, however, because the notion of
"natural" that he is using is problematic. His theory is
that organizations originally arose as part of a natural
process to fulfill needs for survival, reproduction, and
self-sufficiency, none of which, however, inevitably lead to a polis
(witness the many other organizational models in Aristotle's own
time, and our own), and none of which inevitably lead to the good
life. Taylor makes the point that it may be that the
polis is a goal of human organization, but it may be a
non-natural goal (as flying is for humans). In general, Taylor
seems to be pointing out that the polis may be artificial
(i.e. not specified by human nature) and there may be other forms of
organization that provide humans with an opportunity for the good
life. If Aristotle is right that the polis is the only best goal
of human nature, then modern societies almost uniformly deprive
humans of successful human lives. That seems preposterous, but
it may not be. Perhaps we can salvage Aristotle's enterprise
by loosening up the concept of the polis: as good
Aristotelians, we will be saving Aristotle's spirit, but jettisoning
the letter of his writings.
AUTONOMY VERSUS THE COMMUNAL GOOD
There is a tension in Aristotle's
thought. He is torn between two ideas (the
first of which Aristotle expresses clearly and forcefully, but
Taylor insists that he rejects):
- The individual is a part of the polis as a hand is part of
a body: it exists for the body, and the body exists for the
soul. The hand (or the body) cannot exist separately from
the body (or soul), and the good of the hand (or the body) is
limited to its making the proper contribution to the body (or
soul). According to this idea, the individual's good is limited
to contributing to the polis, and the individual has no good of
its own. This amounts to totalitarianism:
the individual's good is subordinate to the greater good and is
limited to his or her contribution to the state. Individual :
state : : slave : master.
- The relation of individual to state is that the individuals
must freely accept the rule of the state and the state must
have the good of those individuals as its goal. The good
of the individual is prior to that of the state, because the
good of the state is defined via the good of its members. What
is more, the state is not to
impose its rule even for the good of the individual:
that is because the good of the individual (virtue) requires that the
individual autonomously direct his or her life
by practical reasoning. See Metaphysics 982b25:
"a free man is for his own sake and not for the sake of
another."
In spite of 2, Aristotle still held that the most rational
decision that individuals can make is to promote the good life for
the whole community, not just for the individual.
The good life for the individual
"requires participation in the government of a self-governing
community": not participating means giving up the direction
of important parts of one's life and so compromising the exercise of
one's deliberative capacities (i.e. the exercise of one's virtue).
BTW, our 'representative' style of democracy clearly does not
fulfill Aristotle's ideal.
THEORETICAL VERSUS POLITICAL/PRACTICAL
There is a tension in Aristotle
between theoretical activity and political activity: the
life of science and the life of political action. Aristotle held
that scientific activity is superior to political activity.
Nonetheless, Aristotle can claim that a full life must
include both. Thus Aristotle's citizens will not choose
between a life of political activity and a life of science: they
will choose a life that includes both, because of their nature,
which requires that they take part in a community (the polis).
But there are problems, for scientific activity requires
leisure, and not everyone can be at leisure all the time.
Someone needs to do the work that creates the capacity for leisure.
Does everyone have to divide their time between work to provide
basic necessities and leisure, or do some get leisure while others
work for it? Who deserve what? The problem is that Aristotle's
communities may face a situation in which the majority of their
members are precluded from various virtues so that a minority can
be virtuous.
Aristotle seems to think that slaves (supplied by barbarians),
resident aliens (Aristotle was one), and those who are not
intelligent enough to be elite are the ones who will provide the
means for the elite to be virtuous. Aristotle gives no convincing
argument that those members of the community would be better off
serving the interests of the elite. He needs to do that.
TYPES OF GOVERNMENT
When it comes to discussing types
of governments, Aristotle's enterprise has two conflicting aspects:
- To describe and
classify existing phenomena
- To prescribe and
analyze what is best
Hence parts of the Politics
aim to describe the various modes of government which
Aristotle knows about and to classify them. Other parts
aim to analyze which form of government is best and why. At
times he describes the best ideal polis with no attention to
whether it is practicable, and at other times he speaks of
making the best out of whatever government happens to exist.
In books 7-8, he is mainly discussing the ideally best government,
while in 4-6, he is discussing the best government given people's
current situations.
Broadly speaking, Aristotle's analysis of types of government has
similarities to Plato's as is found in later books of Republic.
The polis is a community of citizens, and a citizen
is one capable of the deliberation and judgement required for
government.
Political rule for Ar. is ideally exercised by free and
equal subjects (1255b20) with a view to promoting the common
interest (1279a16).
Types of government are distinguished by who does the governing.
Each type has an ideal form in which government is for the good
of the community and a form that deviates from the ideal in that
government is in the interests of those who govern.
- By one
- By a few
- By the many
Aristotle's highest ideal form of government is,
paradoxically, a total monarchy in which one supremely
virtuous person rules and controls all. That is an ideal that
Aristotle presumably never saw in actuality: it takes a human of
superhuman virtue, one who towers above fellow humans in terms of
virtue. Why this is ideal is hard to say: in fact, it seems
ideal only if the other members of the community are subhuman (incapable
of rational deliberation), for
otherwise their virtue will be constantly compromised. (By
way of contrast with Aristotle, the Stoic Zeno, who is of a
generation after Aristotle, is thought to have said that the ideal
government is not required, because it presupposes an ideal world in
which people are also ideal, and in that world, everyone does good
autonomously.)
In a community with free and equal citizens, however, the only
sort of monarchy that is tolerable is one in which the monarch is
subject to law: Taylor calls that a form of magistracy. The
'king' is the top magistrate, but the laws are the supreme authority
and the community members are subject to the law.
Rule by the few is, ceteris paribus, similar to monarchy.
A useful distinction, however, is that between a system of rule
that has indefinite terms of office and one that has limited terms
of office. In a system of rule that has limited terms, it seems it
may be possible for many to exercise their virtue, just not at all
times.
The best government makes the best life available to its citizens:
but which ones? All of them? Only some of them? Who are citizens/who
are not? At 1324a23, A says "it is clear that the best
constitution is that organization by which everyone, whoever he
is, would do the best things and live a blessed life."
A strong tenet of A's ideal involves citizens taking turns ruling
and being ruled (1332b26): including all members of the
community would seem to strengthen that, but Aristotle does not
opt for that. That makes Aristotle's ideal an exploitative system.
Wealth plays a role in various sorts of government: the rich few
in power favor policies which maintain that power; the poor many
in power favor policies which maintain their power. Aristotle knew
that such things are matters of degree, but there are typical
traits of democracies and oligarchies which involve wealth:
democracies pay citizens to perform civic duties, have no property
qualifications for office, and select magistrates by lot, while
oligarchies have property qualifications for holding office, elect
magistrates, and penalize for non-performance of civic duties.
Aristotle favored a mixed democratic-oligarchic regime, but
he does not specify the precise manner of mixing. He did, however,
say that the best practicable type of government was one whose
community had a predominant middle class. He claimed that the
government by a middle class favored the common interest most: he
did not analyze why that was so.