Abstract
The purpose of this article is to set out an Aristotelian account of individual
autonomy. Individual autonomy is the capacity of the individual to make
and act upon judgments for which he is held morally accountable. This
sense of autonomy may be contrasted to a number of other senses. Of
these, the most important are political or legal autonomy and Kantian
principled autonomy. Political or legal autonomy concerns the environment
in which an individual operates. It exists where individuals are able to
operate reasonably freely.1 For the most part we will not consider this
sense except insofar as it is necessary to explain the importance placed on
respecting individual autonomy. Kantian principled autonomy has been
described recently by Onora O‟Neill in a series of writings.2 On this
account, autonomy is seen as a characteristic of the principle behind action rather than of action per se and is not a characteristic of agents at all.