The Function Argument in Aristotle's Ethics
By (Author) Jakub Jirsa
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
16th October 2025
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Ethics and moral philosophy
Hardback
256
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
The first book-length study of the function argument, which plays a central role in Aristotles ethics, with critical commentary outlining its importance for Aristotles understanding of happiness and living well.
The Function Argument in Aristotles Ethics gives a systematic account of the development of the function argument from Platos Republic to the Nicomachean Ethics, with an explication of the interdependence between different versions of the argument which appear in Aristotle's ethical writings. In careful close readings of Aristotles ethical writings in each of the Proptrepticus, the Eudemian Ethics and the Nicomachean Ethics, Jirsa makes the case that the function (ergon) argument--that the function of human beings is virtuous activity of the rational part of the soulserves to differentiate between happiness (eudaimonia) and the happy life (eudaimon bios). The book then evaluates Aristotles function argument against contemporary critiques.
With original English translations of sections of the Proptrepticus based on the recent reconstruction from ancient sources and fragments, this volume gives a novel context for understanding a key element of Aristotles ethical works, and is an ideal reference for those studying Aristotelian ethics, virtue ethics and the history of philosophy.
Jakub Jirsa is Associate Professor, Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies, Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic