Lo verosímil en la ética de Aristóteles: una aporía en el vocabulario filosófico griego

Authors

  • José Montoya Universitat de València

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3989/isegoria.2007.i37.115

Keywords:

Greek Ethics, Aristotle, virtue, verisimilitude, (un)certainty, apory, morality, probability

Abstract


While the mainstream of modern moral philosophy has always assumed that the characteristic situation in moral judgments should be the certitude, Aristotle’s moral philosophy is dominated by the idea of verisimilitude. As a matter of fact, its main concept, namely «virtue», is doubly permeated by this idea, both in its psychological and epistemological sides: we cannot know with certitude (only with verisimilitude) what is entailed by the adscription of a virtue (e.g. generosity), both generally and in a particular case. Nevertheless, verisimilitude is a good enough ground for action.

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Published

2007-12-30

How to Cite

Montoya, J. (2007). Lo verosímil en la ética de Aristóteles: una aporía en el vocabulario filosófico griego. Isegoría, (37), 177–184. https://doi.org/10.3989/isegoria.2007.i37.115

Issue

Section

Notes and Discussions