Some thoughts about the origins of ``greek ethics''

The Journal of Ethics 5 (1):3-20 (2001)
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Abstract

In this paper, I argue that several of the main issues that became a focus for classical Greek philosophy were initially framed by Homer. In particular, Homer identifies a tension between justice and individual excellence, and problematizes the connection between the heroic conception of excellence and ``eudaimonia'''' (happiness). The later philosophers address the problems raised in Homer by profoundly transforming the way each of these terms was to be conceived.

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Nicholas D. Smith
Lewis & Clark College

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