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Full Description
Johnson argues that Aristotle's Politics needs to be understood as a 'two-layered' treatise - the first being Aristotle's political theory, and the second as a set of questions for statesmen and politicians. Employing this model, the book sets about to provide a reconceptualization of Politics as a multi-layered, canonical work.
Contents
Table of Contents List of Abbreviations and Note on Text Preface Acknowledgements Introduction: Philosophy and Politics in Aristotle's Politics 1. Aristotle's Audiences 2. Politics Book I 3. Aristotle's Method in the Politics 4.The Essential Nature of the State and Specific Identities in Aristotle's Politics 5. Evaluating the Goodness of Regimes 6. Why Constitutions Differ: Causation in the Politics 7. The Citizen and the Sovereign Office in the Politics 8. Polity and the Middle Regime in the Politics 9. The 'Best State Absolutely' Bibliography