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  • Nicomachean Ethics

  • By: Aristotle
  • Narrated by: Matthew Josdal
  • Length: 8 hrs and 14 mins
  • 3.8 out of 5 stars (101 ratings)

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Nicomachean Ethics

By: Aristotle
Narrated by: Matthew Josdal
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Publisher's summary

Nicomachean Ethics is Aristotle’s most famous work on the subject of ethics and virtue. It is based on notes from Aristotle’s lectures at the Lyceum and may have been edited by or dedicated to his son, Nicomachus. Aristotle believed that ethical knowledge is not precise knowledge, like logic and mathematics, but general knowledge like nutrition and exercise. Since ethics is a practical discipline rather than a theoretical one, he thought that to become "good", one could not simply study what virtue is; one must actually be virtuous. Aristotle postulates that everything is done with some goal in mind and that goal is "good". The ultimate goal, which he calls the "Highest Good" is happiness.

Public Domain (P)2010 Alpha DVD LLC
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What listeners say about Nicomachean Ethics

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Narration is not philosophy friendly

Narrator narrates The Text as İFLÂS he is vomitting some sorsa outcome of which is terrible for a philosophy book. (Has to but the Samet book from another narrator.)

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    3 out of 5 stars
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Great text, lousy reading

How could the performance have been better?

The reader clearly had little familiarity with the text or Greek--many names were mispronounced--and he also always read out "i.e." or "e.g." instead of saying "that is" or "for instance."

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6 people found this helpful

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    5 out of 5 stars
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Aristotle is always relevant

You would think that such ancient knowledge would be outdated and irrelevant. But it is not... Actually it is more relevant today than ever

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The love of knowledge

I advice you hear The Great Courses lecture on Aristotle’s ethics first, it will help you digest this easier.

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    4 out of 5 stars
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Great to Listen to, valuable when understood

I enjoyed the thoroughness of the text and was especially appreciative of the narrator not being of a British persuasion. I believe the classic works are overrun with British accents narrating them and could use more balance if for nothing more than variety and choice. Great audiobook all around.

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Heavy but interesting

Josdal does a fantastic job of bringing Aristotle's words to life. The book is quite dense, but still interesting.

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Stilted Translation Handicaps Narration

The narrator does a workmanlike job with the text and the audio quality is excellent, but this is a stilted translation and not engaging. Even for someone who knows the work well, it can be tedious to follow, and I often found myself having to imagine the text on the page to follow along. I much prefer the old Blackstone version narrated by Nadia May, and would encourage other listeners to make use of the audio sample before choosing among the several versions available.

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2 people found this helpful