For Aristotle, the good life is eudaimonia: an active flourishing that consists in the soul's exercise of its characteristic excellences over a complete life, guided by reason and settled by good habits.
Aristotle treats ethics and logic as parts of one project: the study of how a rational animal reasons and acts well. A student of Plato and later founder of the Lyceum, he broke with his teacher on a central point. Where Plato locates the real in Forms set apart from the world, Aristotle looks for form within particular things, and for the human good within the shape of a human life rather than above it. His Nicomachean Ethics asks what the best life is, while the treatises later gathered as the Organon ask what counts as a valid inference.[1] The two inquiries meet in his picture of a person who both sees the good and reasons soundly toward it.
Because he was a naturalist as much as a philosopher, Aristotle builds his ethics from observation of how people actually live and what they in fact pursue, rather than from a single ruling principle. The method is deliberately untidy, and he warns that ethics admits only as much precision as its subject allows. NoteHe cautions that one should expect from each field only the exactness its matter permits, and not demand proofs where good judgment is called for.
Eudaimonia and function
Every activity aims at some good, Aristotle observes, and these goods form a hierarchy of ends. Some are pursued for the sake of others, but there must be a final end sought for its own sake, or desire would run on without object. That end he calls eudaimonia, usually rendered as happiness but closer to flourishing or living well. It is not a feeling but an activity, and not one moment but a pattern across a whole life.[2]
To say what this flourishing consists in, he turns to the function argument. A thing does well when it performs its characteristic work well: the good flautist plays well, the good eye sees clearly. The work distinctive of a human being is activity of the soul in accordance with reason. So the human good is the activity of the rational soul carried out excellently, which is to say in accordance with virtue. External goods such as health, friends, and adequate means are not dismissed; Aristotle grants that misfortune can obstruct flourishing, but he denies that they are its core.
Virtue and the mean
Virtue, or arete, is excellence of character. Aristotle divides it into two kinds. Intellectual virtues, such as theoretical wisdom and understanding, are cultivated chiefly by teaching. Moral virtues, such as courage, temperance, and generosity, arise through habituation: we become just by doing just acts, and brave by acting bravely, until the disposition becomes second nature.[3] Character is therefore made, not merely given, which is why upbringing and practice carry so much weight in his account.
The doctrine of the mean
Each moral virtue lies between two vices, one of excess and one of deficiency. Courage stands between rashness and cowardice, generosity between wastefulness and stinginess, proper ambition between vanity and meanness of spirit. The mean is not a fixed midpoint on a scale but the response appropriate to the situation, felt at the right time, toward the right people, in the right way. Some actions, he adds, have no mean at all, since there is no measured way to commit murder or betrayal.
Practical wisdom
Finding the mean requires phronesis, practical wisdom: the capacity to perceive what a particular situation calls for and to deliberate well about how to act. Practical wisdom is not the same as cleverness, since it is directed at genuinely good ends, and it cannot be reduced to a rulebook, because the cases it addresses are too varied to be settled in advance. NoteFor Aristotle full virtue and practical wisdom imply one another: neither is complete without the other.
This is where his ethics stays close to ordinary life. The person of practical wisdom reads circumstances the way a skilled craftsman reads material, and acts from a settled character rather than from calculation alone. Habit supplies the reliable disposition; reason supplies the discernment; together they yield action that is both good and one's own.
Logic and the syllogism
The same interest in valid reasoning gives Aristotle a claim to founding logic as a discipline. The six treatises of the Organon, the tool, cover terms, propositions, and arguments: the Categories classifies the basic kinds of thing that can be said to exist, On Interpretation treats statements and their truth, and the Prior Analytics sets out the syllogism.[4] A syllogism, he writes, is an argument in which, certain things being posited, something else follows of necessity from them. The stock example runs: all humans are mortal; Socrates is human; therefore Socrates is mortal.
A deduction is speech in which, certain things having been supposed, something different from those supposed results of necessity because of their being so. after Aristotle, Prior Analytics, I.1
In the Posterior Analytics he moves from valid inference to scientific knowledge, holding that genuine understanding demonstrates conclusions from first principles that are themselves grasped without demonstration. The link to the ethics is not decorative. A life goes well when its reasoning is sound at both levels: correct in its general grasp of what is good, and correct in the particular inferences that carry a person from that grasp to a chosen act.
Objections
Several difficulties have been pressed. Critics ask whether the function argument really works, since a thing can have many functions and it is not obvious that reason is the one that fixes the human good. Others note that the doctrine of the mean gives little concrete guidance: to be told that courage is the mean does not tell a soldier what to do, and the appeal to practical wisdom can look like a placeholder for the very judgment it was meant to explain.[5] A further worry is that grounding virtue in the good habits of a well-run community makes the theory hostage to which community one happens to be raised in.
A current angle
Aristotle's framework has become a live reference point in debates about the design of artificial systems. Where much recent ethics of technology sets down rules or tallies outcomes, a virtue-based approach asks instead what dispositions we want an agent to acquire through its training, and whether a system can be shaped to exercise anything like practical judgment in unforeseen cases. The comparison is inexact, since habituation in a person is not the same as optimization over data, but the questions rhyme: how does a reasoner come to reliably do the right thing, and can good conduct be captured by a rule or only by a formed character. Aristotle's answer, that reliable good action depends on judgment that no fixed rule fully replaces, remains a pointed challenge to any project that hopes to specify the good in advance.