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Ethical Interpretation of the Concept of Natural Slavery in Aristotle’s Philosophy
Author(s) -
Roman S. Platonov
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
ètičeskaâ myslʹ
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2074-4897
pISSN - 2074-4870
DOI - 10.21146/2074-4870-2020-20-2-19-36
Subject(s) - interpretation (philosophy) , prudence , epistemology , virtue , doctrine , morality , natural (archaeology) , philosophy , subject (documents) , reflexive pronoun , power (physics) , craft , natural law , sociology , law , computer science , political science , history , theology , linguistics , physics , archaeology , quantum mechanics , library science
The article examines the interpretation of Aristotle’s conception of natural slavery, which is based on his ethical doctrine. The article sets a goal to show the features of this interpreta­tion and its advantages over more popular interpretation, which is based on Aristotle’s polit­ical doctrine. To do this, we analyze the so-called “aporia of slavery” as one of the main problems of the conception – the incompatibility of defining a slave as a person and as a tool. In Aristotle’s description, the dependent position of the slave is formed due to the limitations of his intellectual activity, primarily the virtue “prudence”, which makes him in­capable of governing in general and of governing himself in particular. In this situation, his activities are limited to craft/art (teсhne), like that of the craftsman, but since he is incapable of governing himself, it is necessary to limit personal freedom. However, Aristotle also li­mits the power of the master, as a result, it becomes possible to communicate between the slave and the master. This communication has a moral goal – the moral development of the slave and the realization of master’s virtues. Not every free, i.e. morally independent, person can be a master, i.e. morally developed enough to guide the development of another person. Thus, the slave becomes a subject of morality – the master has moral obligations to­wards him and only the fulfillment of these obligations is a basis of his power, not the law or origin. In other words, the point is not the exploitation of a person by a person, but is a fair and mutual morally binding distribution of communicative roles, i.e. Aristotle calls a morally dependent person “natural slavery”. All social limitations are secondary and derived from this feature, and this eliminates aporia. Aristotle’s ideas do not correspond to classical or pa­triarchal slavery, they are a unique conception of moral communication.

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