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Philia : ウィキペディア英語版
Philia

''Philia'' ( or ; ), often translated "brotherly love", is one of the four ancient Greek words for love: ''philia'', ''storge'', ''agape'' and ''eros''. In Aristotle's ''Nicomachean Ethics'', philia is usually translated as "friendship" or affection.〔Liddell and Scott: (φιλία )〕 The complete opposite is called a phobia.
== Aristotle's view ==
As Gerard Hughes points out, in Books VIII and IX Aristotle gives examples of philia including:
:"young lovers (1156b2), lifelong friends (1156b12), cities with one another (1157a26), political or business contacts (1158a28), parents and children (1158b20), fellow-voyagers and fellow-soldiers (1159b28), members of the same religious society (1160a19), or of the same tribe (1161b14), a cobbler and the person who buys from him (1163b35)."〔Hughes, p. 168.〕
All of these different relationships involve getting on well with someone, though Aristotle at times implies that something more like actual liking is required. When he is talking about the character or disposition that falls between obsequiousness or flattery on the one hand and surliness or quarrelsomeness on the other, he says that this state:
:"has no name, but it would seem to be most like (); for the character of the person in the intermediate state is just what we mean in speaking of a decent friend, except that the friend is also fond of us." (1126b21)
This passage indicates also that, though broad, the notion of philia must be mutual, and thus excludes relationships with inanimate objects, though philia with animals, such as pets, is allowed for (see 1155b27–31).
In his ''Rhetoric'', Aristotle defines the activity involved in philia (τὸ φιλεῖν) as:
:"wanting for someone what one thinks good, for his sake and not for one's own, and being inclined, so far as one can, to do such things for him" (1380b36–1381a2)
John M. Cooper argues that this indicates:
:"that the central idea of φιλíα is that of doing well by someone for his own sake, out of concern for ''him'' (and not, or not merely, out of concern for oneself). (Thus ) the different forms of φιλíα (listed above ) could be viewed just as different contexts and circumstances in which this kind of mutual well-doing can arise"〔Cooper, p. 302〕
Aristotle takes philia to be both necessary as a means to happiness ("no one would choose to live without friends even if he had all the other goods" ()) and noble or fine (καλόν) in itself.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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