Philosophers for the city: Aristotle and the telos of education.
Shaw, Elizabeth C.
THE LIFE DEDICATED to intellectual pursuits is commonly understood
as rarefied and prohibitively esoteric--a life suited to the few rather
than the many. Often referred to as the contemplative life, it is
associated with images of monastic isolation and is often deemed a life
dedicated to (or even perhaps wasted on) puzzlings and musings that are
useless from a practical perspective. Such a life grates on the
pragmatic mindset and is subject to severe criticism, with critics
decrying it as unproductive, self-indulgent, antisocial, and indeed
stultifying inasmuch as it inhibits the flourishing of the human qua
social and political animal. The absent-minded professor, ineffectual
and irrelevant, is, for example, a stock figure of popular
entertainment. Aristotle, however, saves this life from these and other
sorts of criticisms, as he consistently maintains that theoria springs
from the natural human condition and is ineluctably bound up with the
fullness of social living.
Inasmuch as the city needs its proper parts, namely citizens, it
needs education. Training and education produce virtue in citizens, and
the virtue of the city lies in the virtue of its proper parts. (1) Thus
education is essential for the formation of citizens, and hence for the
existence of the city. In the Politics, Aristotle addresses at length
the issue of education. He discusses both why the city needs it and what
sort it should be, and he gives specific recommendations regarding
particular subjects that ought to be studied. The principle that what is
lower or worse exists for the sake of what is higher or better (2) runs
through this discussion (as, for example, the body is for the soul and
the appetites are for the intellect), and this logic culminates in the
view that what is for its own sake is best. In asserting that theoretic
reason is the highest thing in man (3) and maintaining that leisure or
leisured activity is that which exists for its own sake, that which is
the end of all other activities (including education), (4) Aristotle
leads us to the conclusion that the best possible activity of leisure
involves the employment of theoretic reason. As such, education must
ultimately be for the sake of the theoretic life.
Having drawn this conclusion, we observe that education at once
serves civic life and yet can be seen in some sense to extend beyond the
city--beyond the practical, political life. The theoretic life, the life
of the philosopher, is free and noble, while other forms of political or
civic life are oriented to what is useful and bound to necessities.
Education serves the practical life insofar as it forms citizens for the
city; but ultimately education, like all progress-oriented activities,
is for the sake of that which is for its own sake. Education does not
merely produce citizens and rulers, it produces philosophers.
Aristotle notes that men are perfected and made virtuous by three
things: nature, habit, and reasoned speech or logos. (5) A man's
nature is a necessary but not sufficient condition for virtue. As such,
the natural state of the soul is not properly described as virtuous. (6)
Education is needed to perfect what is mere potential provided by
nature, as "all art and education aim at filling up nature's
deficiencies." (7)
Furthermore, Aristotle notes that education fulfills an important
role in clarifying man's view of his goals. All men "aim at
the good life and happiness," but some "go wrong at the start
in their search for happiness." (8) That is to say, some err in
their initial conception of their goal, as is evident, for example, from
the varied opinions regarding happiness that Aristotle critiques in book
1, chapter 5 of the Nicomachean Ethics. In order to live and act
properly for the sake of the good life, men need correctly to establish
"the aim and end of their actions,... [and] the ascertainment of
the actions leading to that end." (9) Given Aristotle's view
of the primacy of sense experience with respect to the establishment of
concepts in the mind, it is proper to note that in order to conceive of
the end which is the virtue and nobility of the good life, men need to
be exposed to and experience this virtue or nobility, at least on some
level. (10) Education provides this exposure and experience that, in
turn, permit the conception of the proper aim and goal of the good life.
(11)
What sort of education does Aristotle propose for the city? With a
view to cultivating a citizenry open to political rule "rather than
those fit only to rule and be ruled despotically," Aristotle's
proposed education has the general goal of fostering the habits of
freedom. (12) This education should be uniform and public:
"inasmuch as the end for the whole state is one, it is manifest
that education must necessarily be one and the same for all and that the
superintendence of this must be public." (13) It is improper to
regard any individual citizen as purely of or belonging to himself.
Indeed, the term "individual citizen" might seem oxymoronic,
for, strictly speaking, each citizen is part of the city and belongs to
the city. The individual's education is for the sake of the city.
Public education is needed to teach citizens to subordinate private
goods to the public good. (14) And, as Aristotle states, "matters
of public interest ought to be under public supervision." (15) Thus
it is clear Aristotle maintains that civic policy is to override
individuals' decisions regarding education. (16)
Aristotle praises Sparta as a good example of centralized public
education. Nevertheless, the Spartan example serves as a warning against
improperly focused education: the Spartan constitution and system of
education were established "with a view to conquest and war."
Oriented thus to the vulgar, Sparta lost its empire as it lost the noble
life. (17) As such, Aristotle highlights the necessity of an education
designed for free and noble ends.
On Aristotle's view, education is for the sake of developing
virtues, both moral and intellectual. As the means to virtue are nature,
habit, and reason, correspondingly the modes of education are
habituation and reasoned speech. (18) Habit rules over nature, and
reason rules over both habit and nature--"men often act contrary to
their acquired habits and to their nature because of their reason."
(19) Generally speaking, habituation is the mode of education for the
moral virtues and reasoned speech or logos the mode for the intellectual
virtues, though the two are bound up together. Indeed, the development
of moral virtue contributes to that of intellectual virtue; moreover, it
is not proper to view habituation as a process divorced from
rationality.
Aristotle is ever focused on education as training for freedom.
Regarding physical education: "The bodily habit therefore should
have been trained by exercise, but not by exercises that are violent,
and not for one form of labour only, as is the athlete's habit of
body, but for the pursuits of freemen." (20) Children ought to be
directed in their play--"exercise should be obtained by means of
various pursuits, particularly play. But even the games must not be
unfit for freemen, nor laborious, nor undisciplined." (21) Even the
basic training of the body must be carefully done, with an eye to
freedom, the reason being that the education of the body is for the sake
of the soul. (22) With higher ends in mind, Aristotle does not take even
physical education lightly.
The education of the emotions or appetites is also necessary for
freedom. Insofar as emotions involve perceptions and beliefs, they are
"potentially rational and educable." (23) The education of the
emotions is a process of habituation, the end of which is the possession
of moral virtue. The process is not mindless, as the possession of
virtue itself is not mindless. For example, if one is to become
good-tempered, one is not to be habituated simply to avoid anger;
rather, through the cultivation of practical wisdom or phronesis one
becomes skilled at assessing situations and determining what emotional
responses they call for, among which anger is included inasmuch as in
some cases it is appropriate. (24)
By the process of habituation one acquires moral virtue, and one
becomes liberated from natural inclinations and passions. Habituation is
effective because people enjoy not only what is natural or what is
rational but also what they become accustomed to: "people do with
pleasure many things that are not naturally pleasant, once they have
become accustomed to them." (25) The possession of moral virtue is
essential, not simply inasmuch as it frees one from one's natural
passions, but also in that it serves as the foundation for higher
virtue; it frees one for higher achievements. (26) Moreover, while
temperance and justice ought to be possessed by all, they are more
likely to be possessed "more especially when men are at peace and
have leisure" to undertake intellectual pursuits. (27)
Aristotle considers whether students should "practise pursuits
that are practically useful, morally edifying, or higher
accomplishments." (28) While maintaining that citizens ought not to
be kept inordinately busy with the vulgar pursuits of business and
labor, (29) he does concede that certain useful skills and practices
should be learned: "the young must be taught those useful arts that
are indispensably necessary; but it is clear that they should not be
taught all the useful arts, those pursuits that are liberal being kept
distinct from those that are illiberal." (30) Studies should
exclude those activities which are deemed vulgar, namely "all such
arts as deteriorate the condition of the body, and also the industries
that earn wages; for they make the mind preoccupied and degraded."
(31) He asserts that there exist certain subjects that should be studied
not because they are useful or necessary, but because they are liberal
and noble; curiously, however, he fails to specify what these are. (32)
Study should not be too intensive, even in the liberal subjects that are
suited for freemen, but rather only "up to a point, [for] to devote
oneself too assiduously and carefully is liable to have ... injurious
results." (33) Even the liberal subjects can be studied
illiberally. For all courses of study the key is what end one has in
mind when one undertakes to study: to be truly liberal, the end must be
one's own sake, the sake of one's friends, or moral virtue.
"[T]he man who follows the same pursuit because of other people
[that is, the politician or leader] would often appear to be acting in a
menial and servile manner"--wholly unsuitable for a freeman. (34)
All in all, citizens' education should prepare them to "do
what is necessary and useful, but still more ... what is noble."
(35)
Aristotle discusses four subjects that he maintains ought to be
learned: reading and writing, gymnastics, drawing, and music. His
treatment of these four illustrates some of the nuances in his thought
regarding the useful and the necessary subjects, and why or whether they
should be studied. Reading and writing are useful but also necessary,
and "ought to be studied by the young not only because of their
utility ... but also because they may lead on to many other branches of
knowledge." (36) Though useful and arguably servile with respect to
greater pursuits, reading and writing do not render those who study them
similarly servile. On the contrary, these subjects equip us for greater
pursuits. Gymnastics should be studied for its contribution to manly
courage. (37) The training of the body, provided it is not done to
excess, promotes the development of moral virtue--another example of the
lower's being for the sake of the higher. A student ought to learn
drawing for "this study makes a man observant of bodily
beauty." (38) It is not to be learned with a view to its
usefulness, since "to see utility everywhere is entirely unsuited
to men that are great-souled and free." (39) Rather, drawing is
intended to initiate one into the theoretic life, as it promotes the
consideration of beauty for its own sake.
Aristotle devotes a considerable amount of time to the discussion
of music, a subject that he describes as neither useful nor necessary
for business or economic life. Despite its uselessness in these arenas,
it has some value insofar as it may "influence ... the character
and ... the soul." (40) He argues that music makes "our souls
enthusiastic, and enthusiasm is an affection of the soul." It
produces pleasure, and insofar as virtue consists in "feeling
delight and love and hatred rightly," music provides an opportunity
for one to practice virtue, as it were--to be appropriately pleased by
the representations of virtuous characters and noble actions. As such,
music can serve to habituate one "in feeling pain and delight at
representations of reality," which is not unlike responding to
actual situations in real life. (41) He notes that flute-playing, which
precludes the integration of speech into music, is less than ideal: it
can in no way address the reasoning part of the soul and hence has no
effect on the intellect, the implication being that when music includes
words it addresses both reason and the unreasoning part of the soul.
(42) Children ought to learn to play musical instruments for the same
reason that infants are given rattles--in order to keep busy and out of
trouble--but they should not devote too much time to performing music.
(43) Performing as a professional musician renders oneself servile, and
it is likely to vulgarize or to distort the body in ways that are
inappropriate for freemen. (44) Notwithstanding the caveats and
qualifications, Aristotle's treatment of music reveals the great
value to be found in the seemingly useless things.
Aristotle asserts that these useless subjects, which are to be
learned "merely with a view to the pleasure in their pursuit,...
are ends in themselves, while the forms of learning related to business
are studied as necessary and as means to other things." (45) The
useless or liberal subjects are for their own sakes, not utility's,
and thus they are best and highest. They are the noble things to be
pursued for no reason other than their pleasantness. Indeed, it is
proper to understand that leisure or leisured activity is the end of all
work and occupation. Leisure "seems itself to contain pleasure and
happiness and felicity of life. And this is not possessed by the busy
...; for the busy man busies himself for the sake of some end as not
being in his possession, but happiness is an end achieved." (46)
Leisure is not mere play or rest, as these are inseparable from
occupation and simply serve the purpose of refreshing and restoring a
person for further work. Play, rest, and work are really subservient to
leisure. (47) Leisure can be considered the essential element of a
meaningful life, and a combination of the best aspects of work and play.
Human life would be condemned to an eternal alternation between pain
or labor and unmeaning diversion were it not for the fact that nature
itself points to the possibility of a way of life or an activity that
combines the seriousness of occupation with the pleasures of
play. (48)
Given that leisure is not mere play or rest, it is necessary to
determine the proper activities for leisure. (49) Aristotle seeks to
address this issue in his discussion of the noble or liberal subjects;
these studies are pleasant and for their own sakes and hence appropriate
leisurely undertakings. Thus, even liberal education can be seen to be
for the sake of something beyond itself, namely, the activity and
enjoyment of leisure. (50)
Because "reason and intelligence are for us the end of our
natural development," (51) the highest, best, most pleasant
activities for man are to be found in the intellectual life, the life of
reason. Reason itself comprises two types, namely practical reason and
theoretic reason, and while the theoretic life is not attainable by
everyone, it is, among the possibilities for man, the best life. (52)
So, among the possible activities to occupy leisure, the best are those
of the theoretic life. Thus education, being ultimately for the sake of
leisured activity, extends beyond the practical life and has the
theoretic life as its highest possible goal.
How is the life of the politician to be evaluated on the scale of
leisureliness? The political life is properly understood as essentially
practical and not leisurely. In fact, its goal is "to secure
leisure and the good things that are enjoyed in leisure"; thus
political life is work or occupation. (53) The life of the politician is
not the life of the philosopher. Though the political ruler does indeed
require leisure in order to act, the political actions to which his
leisure is devoted do not constitute noble leisure. (54) "[I]t is
the business of the good lawgiver to study how a state, a race of men or
any other community is to partake of the good life and the happiness
possible for them." (55) The politician does not do politics for
its own sake, but rather for the sake of the city. Even the so-called
political philosopher, of which Aristotle himself in writing the
Politics is an example, is concerned with the useful and the necessary,
not the free and the noble. The political philosopher might consider
particular things that are of interest to cities, such as systems of
military defense, or he might enumerate and discuss the variety of
political regimes, or he might serve to arbitrate among different views
of justice. (56) As such, he provides a service to the city: his work is
useful and for the city's sake, not its own sake. In contrast, the
philosopher who enters into the theoretic life by taking up the study of
being as being, for example, does what is purely and simply for its own
sake. (57)
Given this consideration of the distinction between the leisure of
the politician and that of the philosopher, is it proper to say, then,
that the theoretic life is of no value to the city? While it is true
that most men are simply incapable of or not suited to the theoretic
life, some or a few are, and for them it is of eminent value, while also
being valuable in itself. But considering this issue from the
perspective of the city, it is significant to note Aristotle's
discussion in book 2 of the Politics, regarding the reasons why men
commit injustices and the remedies for those inclined to do wrong. He
observes that among those who do commit injustices, some are driven
"in order that they may enjoy the pleasures that are not associated
with pains." Such pleasures are those of leisured activity, as
distinct from the pleasures of play and rest, which are intimately
connected with the pains of toil and labor. For the men who seek these
pleasures there is "no cure for their desires save that which is
derived from philosophy." (58) Hence, the theoretic life is the
only suitable diversion for those men inclined to commit the worst
transgressions. The theoretic life is a safe realm in which the
tyrannically inclined "can find the freedom and activity they would
otherwise seek through politics without incurring its risks: they have
no potentially rebellious slaves nor a ruler's need for
bodyguards." (59) Perhaps more important, the people of the city
are spared despotic rule through the anti-tyrannic device or distraction
of theoria.
Moreover, Aristotle notes that there is a human tendency to regard
despotic rule as true statesmanship and to abhor tyranny at home while
admiring expansionist, despotic rule over others. (60) This regard for
despotism is dangerous, as he states:
... it is not a proper ground for deeming a state happy and for
praising its lawgiver, that is has practised conquest with a view to
ruling over its neighbors. This principle is most disastrous; it
follows from it that an individual citizen who has the capacity ought
to endeavor to attain the power to hold sway over his own city. (61)
In other words, the tyrannical attitude with respect to foreign
affairs breeds tyrants on the domestic front. If there is nothing higher
than politics to be found in the life of the city, tyranny will be a
perennial problem. In order to have a city that is a "small
community ... fully dedicated to the pursuit of virtue and hence to the
best way of life," it is necessary that the extreme attitude of
political partiality and dominance be transcended. The theoretic life
makes room for and promotes this transcendence. (62)
This analysis might seem to taint the theoretic life with the very
utility it is supposed to lack. The theoretic life, precisely because it
is for its own sake, saves the city from despotism by siphoning off
tyrannical urges that might be breeding in the community. As a
manifestation of the truth that the practical, political life is not
highest, philosophy makes itself useful. Without planning,
orchestrating, or otherwise getting involved in the life of the city,
the theoretic life sustains the city. As such, it could be said that
philosophy is to the city as Aristotle's unmoved mover is to the
cosmos. The theoretic life is of ultimate value to the social life of
the city: far from inhibiting the activity of humans qua political
beings, it guards and guarantees the very possibility of such
flourishing.
1. Pol 7.12.1332a33-6. 2. Pol 7.13.1333a21-2. 3. Pol
7.13.1333a27-8. 4. Pol 7.13.1333a35-7. 5. Pol 7.12.1332a39-40. 6.
Randall R. Curren, "Education and the Origins of Character in
Aristotle," Philosophy of Education 47 (1991): 204. 7. Pol
7.15.1337a13. 8. Pol 7.12.1331b39-41, 1332a4-6. 9. Pol 7.12.1331b27-30.
10. Curren, "Education and the Origins of Character in
Aristotle," 205. 11. Richard Sorabji, "Aristotle on the Role
of Intellect in Virtue," Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 74
(1974): 128. 12. Mary P. Nichols, Citizens and Statesmen. A Study of
Aristotle's Politics (Savage, Md., 1992), 154. 13. Pol
8.1.1337a23-6. 14. Jan H. Blits, "Privacy and Public Moral
Education: Aristotle's Critique of the Family," Educational
Theory 35 (1985): 236. 15. Pol 8.1.1337a27-9. 16. Richard Kraut,
Politics. Books VII and VIII (New York, 1997), 172. 17. Pol
7.12.1333b5-26. 18. Nature's contribution is "just
there." It does not involve a process (aside from the applications
of habituation and reasoned speech), and hence is not properly a part of
education. 19. Pol 7.12.1332a5-7. 20. Pol 7.14.1335b8-12. 21. Pol
7.15.1336a27-30. 22. Pol 7.13.1334b25-9. 23. C. D. C. Reeve,
"Aristotelian Education," in Philosophers on Education, ed.
Amelie Oksenberg Rorty (New York, 1998), 55. 24. Sorabji,
"Aristotle on the Role of Intellect in Virtue," 126. 25.
Aristotle, Rhetoric 1369b18-19, quoted in Blits, "Privacy and
Public Moral Education: Aristotle's Critique of the Family,"
228. 26. Carnes Lord, Education and Culture in the Political Thought of
Aristotle (Ithaca, N.Y., 1982), 39. 27. Pol 7.13.1334a25-6. 28. Pol
8.1.1337a39-42. 29. Pol 7.8.1329a1-5. 30. Pol 8.2.1337b4-8. 31. Pol
8.2.1337b12-14. 32. Pol 8.3.1338a31-4. 33. Pol 8.2.1337b15-17. 34. Pol
8.2.1337b18-21. 35. Pol 7.8.1333b1-3. 36. Pol 8.3.1338a39-41. 37. Pol
8.2.1337b26. 38. Pol 8.3.1338b2-4. 39. Pol 8.3.1338a13-16. 40. Pol
8.5.1340a6-7. 41. Pol 8.5.1340a11-25. 42. Pol 8.6.1341a25-7, 1341b8-10,
and Kraut, Politics. Books VII and VIII, 184. 43. Pol 8.5.1340b30-4. 44.
Pol 8.4.1339b7-10, 8.6.1341a4-9. 45. Pol 8.2.1338a9-14. 46. Pol
8.2.1338a1-4. 47. Nichols, Citizens and Statesmen, 158. 48. Lord,
Education and Culture in the Political Thought of Aristotle, 55. 49. Pol
8.2.1337b33-5. 50. Lord, Education and Culture in the Political Thought
of Aristotle, 58. 51. Pol 7.8.1334b15-17. 52. Pol 7.8.1333a23-31. 53.
Lord, Education and Culture in the Political Thought of Aristotle, 197.
54. Lord, Education and Culture in the Political Thought of Aristotle,
56. 55. Pol 7.2.1325a12-14. 56. Nichols, Citizens and Statesmen, 166.
Aristotle does all of these things in the Pol. See 1331a4-1; 1288b3, 23,
29, and 37; and 1282b23. 57. Cf. Aristotle, Metaphysics 1.1-2. 58. Pol
2.4.1267a7-15. 59. Nichols, Citizens and Statesmen, 136. 60. Pol
7.2.1324b32-7. 61. Pol 7.13.1333b30-4. 62. Lord, Education and Culture
in the Political Thought of Aristotle, 194-7.
ELIZABETH C. SHAW is a doctoral candidate in philosophy at The
Catholic University of America.