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Chase's avatar

As a man who constantly wrestles with frugality, Aristotle's discussion of liberality and magnificence was a hard word to receive at points, though they were necessary. As I mulled over his thoughts, and supplemented them with Biblical injunctions of the same nature, I was reminded of the beauty of giving for the sake of others. You truly can't spell miserable without miser. Thanks for you work!

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Nathan Crow's avatar

My translation, the Terence Irwin edition, lists these virtues as generosity, magnificence, magnanimity, ‘the virtue concerned with small honors’, calmness, friendliness, truthfulness, wit, shame (which he concludes is not a virtue or at least not consistent with someone who is virtuous).

The virtue of magnificence was a completely new concept for me. At first, this virtue seems to be only available for the rich. I imagine that I can consider donations to charities or other public works a small form of magnificence.

I had some trouble wrapping my head around magnanimity (or as you better phrased it — great souled).

I was a little dismayed to find that Aristotle thought it wrong to not recognize when one person has more worth than another. Modern ethics tends to build from the basic principle that we all have equal worth. Zarathustra often says that ‘men are not equal’. Was Nietzsche looking back to the morals of this time while reject ‘herd morality’? Going with the ‘Aristotle is always right’ technique, what am I to learn from this?

I really enjoyed the technical analysis of wit.

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