And now let us revert to the Good
of which we are in search: what can it be? for
manifestly it is different in different actions and
arts: for it is different in the healing art
and in the art military, and similarly in the rest.
What then is the Chief Good in each? Is it not
“that for the sake of which the other things
are done?” and this in the healing art is health,
and in the art military victory, and in that of house-building
a house, and in any other thing something else; in
short, in every action and moral choice the End, because
in all cases men do everything else with a view to
this. So that if there is some one End of all
things which are and may be done, this must be the
Good proposed by doing, or if more than one, then
these.
Thus our discussion after some traversing
about has come to the same point which we reached
before. And this we must try yet more to clear
up.
Now since the ends are plainly many,
and of these we choose some with a view to others
(wealth, for instance, musical instruments, and, in
general, all instruments), it is clear that all are
not final: but the Chief Good is manifestly something
final; and so, if there is some one only which is
final, this must be the object of our search:
but if several, then the most final of them will be
it.
Now that which is an object of pursuit
in itself we call more final than that which is so
with a view to something else; that again which is
never an object of choice with a view to something
else than those which are so both in themselves and
with a view to this ulterior object: and so by
the term “absolutely final,” we denote
that which is an object of choice always in itself,
and never with a view to any other.
And of this nature Happiness is mostly
thought to be, for this we choose always for its own
sake, and never with a view to anything further:
whereas honour, pleasure, intellect, in fact every
excellence we choose for their own sakes, it is true
(because we would choose each of these even if no
result were to follow), but we choose them also with
a view to happiness, conceiving that through their
instrumentality we shall be happy: but no man
chooses happiness with a view to them, nor in fact
with a view to any other thing whatsoever.
The same result is seen to follow
also from the notion of self-sufficiency, a quality
thought to belong to the final good. Now by sufficient
for Self, we mean not for a single individual living
a solitary life, but for his parents also and children
and wife, and, in general, friends and countrymen;
for man is by nature adapted to a social existence.
But of these, of course, some limit must be fixed:
for if one extends it to parents and descendants and
friends’ friends, there is no end to it.
This point, however, must be left for future investigation:
for the present we define that to be self-sufficient
“which taken alone makes life choice-worthy,
and to be in want of nothing;” now of such kind
we think Happiness to be: and further, to be
most choice-worthy of all things; not being reckoned
with any other thing, for if it were so reckoned,
it is plain we must then allow it, with the addition
of ever so small a good, to be more choice-worthy than
it was before: because what is put to it becomes
an addition of so much more good, and of goods the
greater is ever the more choice-worthy.
So then Happiness is manifestly something
final and self-sufficient, being the end of all things
which are and may be done.
But, it may be, to call Happiness
the Chief Good is a mere truism, and what is wanted
is some clearer account of its real nature. Now
this object may be easily attained, when we have discovered
what is the work of man; for as in the case of flute-player,
statuary, or artisan of any kind, or, more generally,
all who have any work or course of action, their Chief
Good and Excellence is thought to reside in their work,
so it would seem to be with man, if there is any work
belonging to him.
Are we then to suppose, that while
carpenter and cobbler have certain works and courses
of action, Man as Man has none, but is left by Nature
without a work? or would not one rather hold, that
as eye, hand, and foot, and generally each of his
members, has manifestly some special work; so too
the whole Man, as distinct from all these, has some
work of his own?
What then can this be? not mere life,
because that plainly is shared with him even by vegetables,
and we want what is peculiar to him. We must
separate off then the life of mere nourishment and
growth, and next will come the life of sensation:
but this again manifestly is common to horses, oxen,
and every animal. There remains then a kind of
life of the Rational Nature apt to act: and of
this Nature there are two parts denominated Rational,
the one as being obedient to Reason, the other as
having and exerting it. Again, as this life is
also spoken of in two ways, we must take that which
is in the way of actual working, because this is thought
to be most properly entitled to the name. If then
the work of Man is a working of the soul in accordance
with reason, or at least not independently of reason,
and we say that the work of any given subject, and
of that subject good of its kind, are the same in kind
(as, for instance, of a harp-player and a good harp-player,
and so on in every case, adding to the work eminence
in the way of excellence; I mean, the work of a harp-player
is to play the harp, and of a good harp-player to
play it well); if, I say, this is so, and we assume
the work of Man to be life of a certain kind, that
is to say a working of the soul, and actions with
reason, and of a good man to do these things well
and nobly, and in fact everything is finished off well
in the way of the excellence which peculiarly belongs
to it: if all this is so, then the Good of Man
comes to be “a working of the Soul in the way
of Excellence,” or, if Excellence admits of
degrees, in the way of the best and most perfect Excellence.
And we must add, in a complete life;
for as it is not one swallow or one fine day that
makes a spring, so it is not one day or a short time
that makes a man blessed and happy.
Let this then be taken for a rough
sketch of the Chief Good: since it is probably
the right way to give first the outline, and fill it
in afterwards. And it would seem that any man
may improve and connect what is good in the sketch,
and that time is a good discoverer and co-operator
in such matters: it is thus in fact that all improvements
in the various arts have been brought about, for any
man may fill up a deficiency.
You must remember also what has been
already stated, and not seek for exactness in all
matters alike, but in each according to the subject-matter,
and so far as properly belongs to the system.
The carpenter and geometrician, for instance, inquire
into the right line in different fashion: the
former so far as he wants it for his work, the latter
inquires into its nature and properties, because he
is concerned with the truth.
So then should one do in other matters,
that the incidental matters may not exceed the direct
ones.
And again, you must not demand the
reason either in all things alike, because in some
it is sufficient that the fact has been well demonstrated,
which is the case with first principles; and the fact
is the first step, i.e. starting-point or principle.
And of these first principles some
are obtained by induction, some by perception, some
by a course of habituation, others in other different
ways. And we must try to trace up each in their
own nature, and take pains to secure their being well
defined, because they have great influence on what
follows: it is thought, I mean, that the starting-point
or principle is more than half the whole matter, and
that many of the points of inquiry come simultaneously
into view thereby.