Aristotle and a Great Workplace (APA Citation)
Aristotle and a Great Workplace
From the beginning of its evolution, human beings have been searching for the meaning of happiness. While many may seem this to be an inconsequential questions, others have devoted entire lives to the search for happiness. One such person who devoted a great deal of thought to the question of man's happiness was the famous ancient Greek philosopher, Aristotle. His views on ethics, virtue, and happiness not only can be applied to the individual life, or the actions of the state, but in the modern world can be also applied to the workplace. Civic relationships and civic friendships can be the basis of the creation of a great workplace where managers maintain personal relationships with their employees, the employees then feel valued and increase their productivity, and the business as a whole can prosper and flourish.
In his book The Nicomachean Ethics, Aristotle discussed the meaning of happiness and what it meant to live a good life. He asserted that the device which has been invented to create what is good for man is called "politics;" and it "uses the rest of the sciences…so that this end must be the good for man." (Aristotle, I:ii) Aristotle also identified four general means by which people live their lives in order to gain happiness, but stated that only one was a means by which a person could actually attain it. According to Aristotle, it was not political power, wealth, or worldly pleasures by which a person could achieve real happiness, it was living a contemplative life.
Aristotle claimed that those who engaged in a political life do so out of vanity in order to gain personal honor. Because this only serves to inflate a single person's ego, this is considered to be an empty and vain course of action. Two other ways of life that Aristotle believed were equally as useless in attaining happiness were those who engaged in the pursuit of wealth, and those who engaged in the pursuit of pleasure. These types of lives end up enslaving the person who pursues them and an enslaved person cannot achieve true happiness, they only seek to satisfy their master vanity, greed or pleasure. And while they may get some sort of satisfaction from this service, it does not serve to bring goodness to anyone else but oneself. For instance, wealth in and of itself was useless and was seen by Aristotle as something that could only be used for the sake of something else. Therefore, according to Aristotle, happiness cannot be found in the pursuits of a political life, wealth, or pleasure, but in a fourth way of life which he called the "contemplative life."
A contemplative life is one where a person lives their life contemplating how to live a good life, and Aristotle asserted that virtue is integral to living a contemplative life. It is through virtuous acts, repeated over time, that a person "trains" themselves to become virtuous. Just as a musician trains over time to become a better musician, a person can train themselves to become a more virtuous person, or in other words, "…the virtues we get by first exercising them." (Aristotle, II:i ) And the virtues can be either intellectual, or moral virtues. In either case, it is how a person lives their everyday lives that decide how good of a person they will become, and this starts at a very early age. In the case of intellectual virtue, a person can be taught to be virtuous, and then by practicing these traits over time, that person will become a good person, and will contribute good to the community. But in the case of moral virtue, this already exists inside a person and only through constant virtuous activity can this virtue be brought out of a person's nature. While these may seem to be extremely similar, they are indeed different types of virtue with different ways to acquire them.
When it comes to the interaction of individuals, Aristotle discussed the concept of friendship and divided it into two separate aspects: personal and civic. As a concept, friendship can be defined as "a relationship denoting certain virtues, of mutual affection, of goodwill, of a propensity to seek each other's company, of joint endeavors and shared history, of mutual trust and help when needed…." (Healy, 2005, pp.1-2) How this definition translates into the personal realm is fairly simple, however, how it translates into the civic realm is not so easy to understand. Personal relationships are the most basic connections that people have and usually...
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