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  4. Eleuthería en Aristóteles
 
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Eleuthería en Aristóteles

Journal
Co-herencia
ISSN
1794-5887
2539-1208
Date Issued
2018
Author(s)
Zagal Arreguin, Hector  
Facultad de Filosofía - CampCM  
Type
Resource Types::text::journal::journal article
DOI
10.17230/co-herencia.15.28.3
URL
https://scripta.up.edu.mx/handle/20.500.12552/1575
Abstract
The concept of eleutheria has both political and cultural connotations for the ancient Greeks. It refers to the free condition of Greek citizens as opposed to the barbarian peoples who prefer tyrannical government. Plato and Aristotle also refer to eleutheria in a moral sense, that is, as the free condition of the virtuous man. But Aristotle refers to a virtue in particular: liberality. Liberality implies the prudent use of wealth, that is, the right mean between avarice and prodigality. The exercise of this virtue has repercussions in the political sphere. Firstly, because citizenship presupposes moral virtue in itself. Secondly, because the stability of the polis lies in the core of liberality: unbridled avarice or ambition put the stability of the polis at risk. Consequently, eleutheria has a unitary sense, which goes from the private to the political sphere. ©Co-herencia
Subjects

Aristóteles

Política

Liberalidad

Ética

Aristotle

Politics

Liberality

Virtue

Ethics


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