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Part and Whole in Aristotle‘s Political Philosophy

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Abstract

It is often held that according to Aristotle the city is a natural organism. One major reason for this “organic” interpretation is no doubt that Aristotle describes the relationship between the individual and the city as a part-whole relationship, seemingly the same relationship that holds between the parts of a natural organism and the organism itself. Moreover, some scholars (most notably Jonathan Barnes) believe this view of the city led Aristotle to accept an implicit totalitarianism. I argue, however, that an investigation of the various ways Aristotle describes parts and wholes reveals that for Aristotle the city has a unity (and thus a nature) quite different from that of a natural organism.

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Mayhew, R. Part and Whole in Aristotle‘s Political Philosophy. The Journal of Ethics 1, 325–340 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1009743012461

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1009743012461

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