Sunday, October 13, 2019
The Political Animal :: essays research papers
 Much time has been devoted to the study of how and why  governments exist. This effort is required to understand  America's political and philosophical roots. The ancient  Greek philosopher Aristotle pursued and ultimately  answered this question in his work, The Politics. Though  written thousands of years ago, the lessons taught about the  natural state of politics reveal the immensely complex  system of an organized civil government in modern United  States. Perhaps one of the most profound thoughts  revealed in The Politics concerns the origin and nature of  basic government, the cities. "Hence it is evident that a city  is a natural production, and that man is naturally a political  animal" (Aristotle 1253a). Aristotle's line from The Politics  exemplifies two distinct but related points. The first part  states that the formation of cities is natural and the second  deals with the idea that man is by his own nature, a political  being.     At the beginning of The Politics, Aristotle says, "every city  must be allowed to be the work of nature, if we admit that  the original society between male and female is; for to this  as their end all subordinate societies tend, and the end of  everything is the nature of it"(1253b). Each city begins as a  collection of partnerships. These associations are the     Sugawara 2        bonds that men create between each other as a result of  their natural tendency to be social and interact, "there is  then in all persons a natural impetus to associate with each  other" (1253a). Partnerships are natural because man is not  inclined to be self-sufficient on his own merits. A man  cannot exist merely for his own sake and expect to be a  functioning member of the city but must be supplemented  through the thoughts and ideas of other men. A man must  experience interaction with others to more fully complete  his existence. This supplementation is the essence of  partnerships because dealing with other men increases each  man's own wholeness. Furthermore, by listening to the  thoughts and ideas of other men, he is furthering his own  proclivity, enabling him to be active in the city and  therefore, becoming a human being. It is only through the  city, however, that man can truly be complete because it  reaches a level of full self-sufficiency. The collection of  partnerships that comprise the city makes men into  complete human beings and assists them on their way to  happiness, "the end and perfection of government: first  founded that we might live, but continued that we may live  happily"(1252b). This is a level of excellence for man  because it means that he will not only survive but will thrive  after becoming fully human and therefore happy.  					    
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