A major treatise on moral philosophy by Aristotle, this is the first
time the Eudemian Ethics has been published in its entirety in any
modern language. Equally important, the volume has been translated by
Sir Anthony Kenny, one of Britain's most distinguished academics and
philosophers, and a leading authority on Aristotle. In The Eudemian
Ethics, Aristotle explores the factors that make life worth living. He
considers the role of happiness, and what happiness consists of, and he
analyzes various aspects that contribute to it: human agency, the
relation between action and virtue, and the concept of virtue itself.
Aristotle classifies and examines the various moral and intellectual
virtues, and he considers the roles of friendship and pleasure in a life
well lived. Kenny's superb translation is accompanied by a fine
introduction, in which he highlights the similarities and differences
between this book and the better-known Nicomachean Ethics, with which
it holds three books in
common. There are also many useful explanatory notes which clarify the
arguments and allusions that Aristotle makes.