Moral

280 EGP

Complete Arabic translation for the first time directly from ancient Greek


Moral


After Aristotle, he is the founder of the science and philosophy of ethics in general. He is also the author of the first moderate doctrine in the history of moral philosophical thought throughout history. Aristotle was keen, as usual, when establishing the science of ethics, just as he was keen in establishing any of the sciences that he founded, to define the subject of ethics as he defined the subjects of ethics. Other sciences, so he was the founder


The actual science of ethics, despite the fact that many writings preceded it in this field in the East and West. In this book in particular, the subject of ethical research crystallized, whether it took a scientific character or took a theoretical philosophical character. It is research into human behavior observing what is, and rising from it to crystallizing a picture of what this behavior should be like, until the highest picture is achieved.


For human happiness.


The purpose that Aristotle aimed for in his book was to reveal the most complete and best type of human behavior that a person should follow in his life in order to achieve good.


The maximum for which it was found.


Aristotle Thales: 381 - 322 BC) was born in the city of Stagira, one of the Ionian cities. His father worked as a physician to the King of Macedonia, and this enabled Aristotle to spend part of his childhood in the Macedonian court. Aristotle was a student of Plato’s philosophy, and Aristotle remained loyal to his teachings as his teacher until his death. Aristotle received an invitation from King Philip, King of Macedonia, to be a tutor for his son Alexander, who was about thirteen years old. Following the death of King Philip and Alexander’s accession to the throne of Macedonia, Aristotle returned to Athens, to begin the professorship phase of his intellectual life, by establishing his well-known independent philosophical and scientific school. By the Lucians, the school was distinguished by the hundreds of manuscripts, maps, and samples of objects and living organisms that he collected there, which became the raw material from which he prepared his lectures. About ninety-two books are attributed to Aristotle.

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