MEDICINE AND PHILOSOPHY IN CLASSICAL ANTIQUITY

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240 Aristotle and his school

This problem, then, concerns the consistency of the argument within

this chapter of theEudemian Ethics. That it is a genuine problem is further

shown by the fact that the same objection as that raised in 1247 a 28 – 9

concerning the distribution of the phenomenon ascribed to divine dispen-

sation (and which I shall henceforth refer to as the ‘distribution argument’)

is found in two other Aristotelian writings which are closely parallel to

Eth. Eud. 8. 2 , but there, contrary toEth. Eud. 8. 2 , it is sufficient to reject

anyexplanation which ascribeseutuchia(or a comparable phenomenon)

to a god. The passages in question are the parallel discussion ofeutuchia

in chapter 2. 8 of the so-calledGreat Ethics(Magna moralia,Mag. mor.)

and the treatment of prophetic dreams in theOn Divination in Sleep(De

divinatione per somnum, Div. somn.).

Thus at a certain point of the discussion inMag. mor. 1207 a 6 ff., as

inEth. Eud. 1247 a 23 ff., it is tentatively suggested thateutuchiamight be

explained as a form of divine dispensation:

But iseutuchiaa kind of dispensation of the gods? Or would it appear to be not


that?^9


But this suggestion is rejected on the strength of the following argument:

We hold that God, who is in supreme control of such things [i.e. external goods],


distributes both good and evil to those who deserve it, whereas chance and the


results of chance truly happen as chance would have it. And if we attribute such a


thing to God, we shall make him a poor judge, or at least not a just one; and that


is not befitting for God. ( 1207 a 7 – 12 )^10


In line 15 , this conclusion is repeated:

Surely, neither the concern nor the benevolence of God would seem to beeutuchia,


because it [i.e.eutuchia] also occurs among the wicked; and it is unlikely that God


would care for the wicked.^11


The conclusion of the discussion ofeutuchiainMag. mor. 2. 8 is thateu-

tuchiais caused by an ‘irrational nature’ (alogos phusis), more specifically

by irrational ‘impulses’ or instinctive drives (hormai)( 1207 a 35 ff.). These

‘impulses’ also play an important part in the explanation inEth. Eud. 8. 2

( 1247 b 18 ff.), but the major difference betweenEth. Eud. 8. 2 andMag.

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