- Title Pages
- Preface and Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 Making Sense of My Life as a Whole
- 2 The Virtues
- 3 Nature and Naturalism
- 4 Aristotle: Nature and Mere Nature
- 5 The Stoics: Human Nature and the Point of View of the Universe
- 6 Antiochus: The Intuitive View
- 7 The Epicureans: Rethinking What Is Natural
- 8 The Sceptics: Accepting What Is Natural
- 9 Uses of Nature
- 10 The Good of Others
- 11 Finding Room for Other‐Concern
- 12 Self‐Concern and the Sources and Limits of Other‐Concern
- 13 Justice
- 14 Self‐Interest and Morality
- 15 Happiness, Success and What Matters
- 16 Epicurus: Virtue, Pleasure and Time
- 17 The Sceptics: Untroubledness Without Belief
- 18 Aristotle: An Unstable View
- 19 Theophrastus and the Stoics: Forcing the Issue
- 20 Aristotelian Responses
- 21 Happiness and the Demands of Virtue
- 22 Morality, Ancient and Modern
- Cast of Characters
- Primary Sources
- Secondary Sources
- Index Locorum
- General Index
Justice
Justice
- Chapter:
- (p.291) 13 Justice
- Source:
- The Morality of Happiness
- Author(s):
Julia Annas (Contributor Webpage)
- Publisher:
- Oxford University Press
Justice is a virtue of both character and institutions. Epicurus treats these separately but, it is argued, consistently. The Stoic theory of natural law arguably depoliticizes institutional questions, treating politics as merely one concern of an individual among others. Aristotle deals with both issues of justice separately; later Aristotelians, influenced by the Stoics, have little to say about institutions.
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- Title Pages
- Preface and Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 Making Sense of My Life as a Whole
- 2 The Virtues
- 3 Nature and Naturalism
- 4 Aristotle: Nature and Mere Nature
- 5 The Stoics: Human Nature and the Point of View of the Universe
- 6 Antiochus: The Intuitive View
- 7 The Epicureans: Rethinking What Is Natural
- 8 The Sceptics: Accepting What Is Natural
- 9 Uses of Nature
- 10 The Good of Others
- 11 Finding Room for Other‐Concern
- 12 Self‐Concern and the Sources and Limits of Other‐Concern
- 13 Justice
- 14 Self‐Interest and Morality
- 15 Happiness, Success and What Matters
- 16 Epicurus: Virtue, Pleasure and Time
- 17 The Sceptics: Untroubledness Without Belief
- 18 Aristotle: An Unstable View
- 19 Theophrastus and the Stoics: Forcing the Issue
- 20 Aristotelian Responses
- 21 Happiness and the Demands of Virtue
- 22 Morality, Ancient and Modern
- Cast of Characters
- Primary Sources
- Secondary Sources
- Index Locorum
- General Index