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  2. Mar 13, 2021 · Aristotle outlines three kinds of friendships: a friendship of utility, a friendship of pleasure and a perfect friendship (1156a 101156b 30). [2] . In a friendship of utility, the individuals are connected because of some good that they are able to obtain from each other.

  3. May 30, 2023 · For Aristotle, all friendships are relationships where people mutually like each other, do good for one another, and share goals for the time they spend together.[4] But the friendship changes depending on the reasons that friends value each other and the ways that they do good for each other.

  4. This leads us directly to the category of social relations Aristotle calls philia, which is the ‘friendship of the good’. For Aristotle, the best way of defining philia (what we might these days call ‘close friends’) is ‘those who hold what they have in common’.

  5. Jul 4, 2009 · Aristotle begins afresh in 9.4 with a new and fuller definition of friendship, specifying the elements that are universally acknowledged to constitute friendship. Ordinary opinion tends to think of true friendship and self-regard as altogether different, the one springing from noble generosity and the other involving qualities that are base or ...

    • Lorraine Smith Pangle
    • 2002
  6. For Aristotle, the paradigm of human friendship occurs when two virtuous people, bound by the strength of their orientation toward the realization of the highest human good through virtuous actions, encounter one another as other selves.

  7. Aristotle’s Notion of Friendship. Spyros Benetatos. Philia , the Greek word for friendship, characterizes a wide field of human relationships (much broader than the field designated by the corresponding terms of modern European languages), including family bonds and even political relationships.

  8. This book offers a comprehensive account of the major philosophical works on friendship and its relationship to self-love. The book gives central place to Aristotle's searching examination of friendship in the Nicomachean Ethics.

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