关于迅速变得恐惧:重新诠释亚里士多德的苏格拉底 "akrasia "躯体模型》(Areinterpretation of Aristotle's Somatic Model of Socratean akrasia)。

Brian Andrew Lightbody
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引用次数: 0

摘要

普罗泰戈拉》是苏格拉底道德知识分子立场的试金石。[1]这一立场的含义是,"闇 "或意志薄弱不是欲望(或恐惧)压倒理性的结果,而是由于无知。 然而,苏格拉底关于意志薄弱的消解主义立场与关于 "闇 "行动的常识经验背道而驰,因此亚里士多德不遗余力地使苏格拉底关于道德失禁的论述变得可以理解。亚里士多德对苏格拉底模式的关键改进在于强调,"嗜欲者 "身体的条件在决定一个人的食欲力量以及相应地决定一个人抵御这些食欲诱惑的能力方面起着至关重要的作用。 正如亚里士多德所说:"因为大小便失禁的人就像那些很快就醉倒的人,酒喝得很少,也就是说,比大多数人喝得少"。(1151a 3-4).亚里士多德提出了一种我称之为躯体范式(即醉汉类比)的方法来解决akrasia问题,而正是这种躯体解决方案标志着苏格拉底的知识论或信息论模式的重大改进,这也是传统告诉我们的。 在本文中,我希望反驳上述亚里士多德式的解释。我认为,当我们全面研究苏格拉底关于意志薄弱的论述时,亚里士多德的解决方案并没有传统上认为的那么有效。事实上,苏格拉底可以将亚里士多德的模式引入自己的模式;正如亚里士多德吸收了苏格拉底模式的正确之处,即 "傲慢行动 "利用了理性,但程度有限,苏格拉底在《美诺》(77C-78A)中发展了自己的意志薄弱的躯体模式,与《普罗塔哥拉》的理智主义范式相联系。 为了实现这两种模式之间的和解,我把苏格拉底对那些明知是坏事却仍然渴望得到的人的描述归结为 "坏心眼 "或 "坏脾气"(κακοδαίμων)。坏脾气 "是懦夫,与亚里士多德笔下的酒鬼不同,他遇到一点危险就会迅速变得恐惧。这一额外的躯体成分与苏格拉底在《普罗塔哥拉》(Protagoras)中关于 "akrasia "的立场相联系,为苏格拉底的模式增添了以下新的转折:虽然没有人希望自己心怀不轨,以致弊大于利,但一个人可能会因为明知故犯的错误选择而变得心怀不轨。 [1] "在他之后是苏格拉底,他对这个问题讲得更好、更深入,但即使是他也没有成功。因为他习惯于把美德变成科学,而这是不可能的。因为科学都涉及理性,而理性存在于灵魂的智力部分。因此,他认为所有美德都产生于灵魂的理性部分。结果是,他把美德变成了科学,就等于抹杀了灵魂的非理性部分,从而抹杀了激情和性格......"(亚里士多德,《道德大全》1.1.1182 a15-26)
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On Becoming Fearful Quickly: A Reinterpretation of Aristotle’s Somatic Model of Socratean akrasia.
The Protagoras is the touchstone of Socrates’ moral intellectualist stance. The position in a nutshell stipulates that the proper reevaluation of a desire is enough to neutralize it.[1] The implication of this position is that akrasia or weakness of will is not the result of desire (or fear for that matter) overpowering reason but is due to ignorance.   Socrates’ eliminativist position on weakness of will, however, flies in the face of the common-sense experience regarding akratic action and thus Aristotle was at pains to render Socrates’ account of moral incontinence intelligible. The key improvement Aristotle makes to Socrates’s model is to underscore that the conditioning of the akratic’s body plays a critical role in determining the power of one’s appetites and, accordingly, the capacity of one to resist the temptations these appetites present for rational evaluation.  As Aristotle puts it, “For the incontinent man is like the people who get drunk quickly and on little wine, i.e., on less than most people.” (1151a 3-4). Aristotle presents what I shall call a somatic paradigm (i.e. the drunkard analogy) in order to tackle the problem of akrasia and it is this somatic solution that marks a significant improvement over Socrates’s intellectualist or informational model or so the tradition tells us. In this paper, I wish to push back on the above Aristotelian explanation. I argue that when one fully examines Socrates’ account of weakness of will that Aristotle’s solution is less effective than is traditionally thought. In fact, Socrates can bring Aristotle’s model into his own; just as Aristotle absorbs what is right about Socrates’s model, namely, that akratic action utilizes reason but to a limited degree, Socrates in Meno (77C-78A) develops his own somatic model of weakness of will that connects to the intellectualist paradigm of the Protagoras.   To achieve this rapprochement between the two models, I zero in on the description provided by Socrates of those individuals who desire bad things knowing they are bad as “ill-starred” or “bad spirited” (κακοδαίμων ). The “bad-spirited” is the coward and, in contrast to Aristotle’s drunkard, becomes fearful quickly from little danger. This additional somatic component, when connected to Socrates’s position on akrasia in Protagoras adds a new twist to Socrates’s model in the following way: while no one wishes to be ill-starred such that more harm than good will befall one, one may become so as a result of the bad choices one knowingly makes.   [1] “After him came Socrates, who spoke better and further about this subject, but even he was not successful. For he used to make the virtues into sciences, and this is impossible. For the sciences all involve reason, and reason is to be found in the intellectual part of the soul. So that all the virtues, according to him arise in the rational part of the soul. The result is that in making the virtues into sciences he is doing away with the nonrational part of the soul and is thereby doing away with passion and character…” (Aristotle, Magna Moralia 1.1. 1182 a15-26)
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Linguistic (and Ontological?) encounters between Plato and Karl Popper O ponto de intersecção entre compostos naturais propriamente e não propriamente substanciais em Aristóteles On Becoming Fearful Quickly: A Reinterpretation of Aristotle’s Somatic Model of Socratean akrasia. Some remarks against non-epistemic accounts of immediate premises in Aristotle’s Posterior Analytics O justo cívico em Ethica Nicomachea V.6
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