1
With regards to justice
and injustice we must (1) consider what kind of actions they are concerned with,
(2) what sort of mean justice is, and (3) between what extremes the just act is
intermediate. Our investigation shall follow the same course as the preceding
discussions.
We see that all men mean
by justice that kind of state of character which makes people disposed to do
what is just and makes them act justly and wish for what is just; and similarly
by injustice that state which makes them act unjustly and wish for what is
unjust. Let us too, then, lay this down as a general basis. For the same is not
true of the sciences and the faculties as of states of character. A faculty or a
science which is one and the same is held to relate to contrary objects, but a
state of character which is one of two contraries does not produce the contrary
results; e.g. as a result of health we do not do what is the opposite of
healthy, but only what is healthy; for we say a man walks healthily, when he
walks as a healthy man would.
Now often one contrary
state is recognized from its contrary, and often states are recognized from the
subjects that exhibit them; for (A) if good condition is known, bad condition
also becomes known, and (B) good condition is known from the things that are in
good condition, and they from it. If good condition is firmness of flesh, it is
necessary both that bad condition should be flabbiness of flesh and that the
wholesome should be that which causes firmness in flesh. And it follows for the
most part that if one contrary is ambiguous the other also will be ambiguous;
e.g. if 'just' is so, that 'unjust' will be so too.
Now 'justice' and
'injustice' seem to be ambiguous, but because their different meanings approach
near to one another the ambiguity escapes notice and is not obvious as it is,
comparatively, when the meanings are far apart, e.g. (for here the difference in
outward form is great) as the ambiguity in the use of kleis for the collar-bone
of an animal and for that with which we lock a door. Let us take as a
starting-point, then, the various meanings of 'an unjust man'. Both the lawless
man and the grasping and unfair man are thought to be unjust, so that evidently
both the law-abiding and the fair man will be just. The just, then, is the
lawful and the fair, the unjust the unlawful and the unfair.
Since the unjust man is
grasping, he must be concerned with goods-not all goods, but those with which
prosperity and adversity have to do, which taken absolutely are always good, but
for a particular person are not always good. Now men pray for and pursue these
things; but they should not, but should pray that the things that are good
absolutely may also be good for them, and should choose the things that are good
for them. The unjust man does not always choose the greater, but also the
less-in the case of things bad absolutely; but because the lesser evil is itself
thought to be in a sense good, and graspingness is directed at the good,
therefore he is thought to be grasping. And he is unfair; for this contains and
is common to both.
Since the lawless man was
seen to be unjust and the law-abiding man just, evidently all lawful acts are in
a sense just acts; for the acts laid down by the legislative art are lawful, and
each of these, we say, is just. Now the laws in their enactments on all subjects
aim at the common advantage either of all or of the best or of those who hold
power, or something of the sort; so that in one sense we call those acts just
that tend to produce and preserve happiness and its components for the political
society. And the law bids us do both the acts of a brave man (e.g. not to desert
our post nor take to flight nor throw away our arms), and those of a temperate
man (e.g. not to commit adultery nor to gratify one's lust), and those of a
good-tempered man (e.g. not to strike another nor to speak evil), and similarly
with regard to the other virtues and forms of wickedness, commanding some acts
and forbidding others; and the rightly-framed law does this rightly, and the
hastily conceived one less well. This form of justice, then, is complete virtue,
but not absolutely, but in relation to our neighbour. And therefore justice is
often thought to be the greatest of virtues, and 'neither evening nor morning
star' is so wonderful; and proverbially 'in justice is every virtue
comprehended'. And it is complete virtue in its fullest sense, because it is the
actual exercise of complete virtue. It is complete because he who possesses it
can exercise his virtue not only in himself but towards his neighbour also; for
many men can exercise virtue in their own affairs, but not in their relations to
their neighbour. This is why the saying of Bias is thought to be true, that
'rule will show the man'; for a ruler is necessarily in relation to other men
and a member of a society. For this same reason justice, alone of the virtues,
is thought to be 'another's good', because it is related to our neighbour; for
it does what is advantageous to another, either a ruler or a copartner. Now the
worst man is he who exercises his wickedness both towards himself and towards
his friends, and the best man is not he who exercises his virtue towards himself
but he who exercises it towards another; for this is a difficult task. Justice
in this sense, then, is not part of virtue but virtue entire, nor is the
contrary injustice a part of vice but vice entire. What the difference is
between virtue and justice in this sense is plain from what we have said; they
are the same but their essence is not the same; what, as a relation to one's
neighbour, is justice is, as a certain kind of state without qualification,
virtue.
2
But at all events what we
are investigating is the justice which is a part of virtue; for there is a
justice of this kind, as we maintain. Similarly it is with injustice in the
particular sense that we are concerned.
That there is such a
thing is indicated by the fact that while the man who exhibits in action the
other forms of wickedness acts wrongly indeed, but not graspingly (e.g. the man
who throws away his shield through cowardice or speaks harshly through bad
temper or fails to help a friend with money through meanness), when a man acts
graspingly he often exhibits none of these vices,-no, nor all together, but
certainly wickedness of some kind (for we blame him) and injustice. There is,
then, another kind of injustice which is a part of injustice in the wide sense,
and a use of the word 'unjust' which answers to a part of what is unjust in the
wide sense of 'contrary to the law'. Again if one man commits adultery for the
sake of gain and makes money by it, while another does so at the bidding of
appetite though he loses money and is penalized for it, the latter would be held
to be self-indulgent rather than grasping, but the former is unjust, but not
self-indulgent; evidently, therefore, he is unjust by reason of his making gain
by his act. Again, all other unjust acts are ascribed invariably to some
particular kind of wickedness, e.g. adultery to self-indulgence, the desertion
of a comrade in battle to cowardice, physical violence to anger; but if a man
makes gain, his action is ascribed to no form of wickedness but injustice.
Evidently, therefore, there is apart from injustice in the wide sense another,
'particular', injustice which shares the name and nature of the first, because
its definition falls within the same genus; for the significance of both
consists in a relation to one's neighbour, but the one is concerned with honour
or money or safety-or that which includes all these, if we had a single name for
it-and its motive is the pleasure that arises from gain; while the other is
concerned with all the objects with which the good man is concerned.
It is clear, then, that
there is more than one kind of justice, and that there is one which is distinct
from virtue entire; we must try to grasp its genus and differentia.
The unjust has been
divided into the unlawful and the unfair, and the just into the lawful and the
fair. To the unlawful answers the afore-mentioned sense of injustice. But since
unfair and the unlawful are not the same, but are different as a part is from
its whole (for all that is unfair is unlawful, but not all that is unlawful is
unfair), the unjust and injustice in the sense of the unfair are not the same as
but different from the former kind, as part from whole; for injustice in this
sense is a part of injustice in the wide sense, and similarly justice in the one
sense of justice in the other. Therefore we must speak also about particular
justice and particular and similarly about the just and the unjust. The justice,
then, which answers to the whole of virtue, and the corresponding injustice, one
being the exercise of virtue as a whole, and the other that of vice as a whole,
towards one's neighbour, we may leave on one side. And how the meanings of
'just' and 'unjust' which answer to these are to be distinguished is evident;
for practically the majority of the acts commanded by the law are those which
are prescribed from the point of view of virtue taken as a whole; for the law
bids us practise every virtue and forbids us to practise any vice. And the
things that tend to produce virtue taken as a whole are those of the acts
prescribed by the law which have been prescribed with a view to education for
the common good. But with regard to the education of the individual as such,
which makes him without qualification a good man, we must determine later
whether this is the function of the political art or of another; for perhaps it
is not the same to be a good man and a good citizen of any state taken at
random.
Of particular justice and
that which is just in the corresponding sense, (A) one kind is that which is
manifested in distributions of honour or money or the other things that fall to
be divided among those who have a share in the constitution (for in these it is
possible for one man to have a share either unequal or equal to that of
another), and (B) one is that which plays a rectifying part in transactions
between man and man. Of this there are two divisions; of transactions (1) some
are voluntary and (2) others involuntary- voluntary such transactions as sale,
purchase, loan for consumption, pledging, loan for use, depositing, letting
(they are called voluntary because the origin of these transactions is
voluntary), while of the involuntary (a) some are clandestine, such as theft,
adultery, poisoning, procuring, enticement of slaves, assassination, false
witness, and (b) others are violent, such as assault, imprisonment, murder,
robbery with violence, mutilation, abuse, insult.
3
(A) We have shown that
both the unjust man and the unjust act are unfair or unequal; now it is clear
that there is also an intermediate between the two unequals involved in either
case. And this is the equal; for in any kind of action in which there's a more
and a less there is also what is equal. If, then, the unjust is unequal, just is
equal, as all men suppose it to be, even apart from argument. And since the
equal is intermediate, the just will be an intermediate. Now equality implies at
least two things. The just, then, must be both intermediate and equal and
relative (i.e. for certain persons). And since the equall intermediate it must
be between certain things (which are respectively greater and less); equal, it
involves two things; qua just, it is for certain people. The just, therefore,
involves at least four terms; for the persons for whom it is in fact just are
two, and the things in which it is manifested, the objects distributed, are two.
And the same equality will exist between the persons and between the things
concerned; for as the latter the things concerned-are related, so are the
former; if they are not equal, they will not have what is equal, but this is the
origin of quarrels and complaints-when either equals have and are awarded
unequal shares, or unequals equal shares. Further, this is plain from the fact
that awards should be 'according to merit'; for all men agree that what is just
in distribution must be according to merit in some sense, though they do not all
specify the same sort of merit, but democrats identify it with the status of
freeman, supporters of oligarchy with wealth (or with noble birth), and
supporters of aristocracy with excellence.
The just, then, is a
species of the proportionate (proportion being not a property only of the kind
of number which consists of abstract units, but of number in general). For
proportion is equality of ratios, and involves four terms at least (that
discrete proportion involves four terms is plain, but so does continuous
proportion, for it uses one term as two and mentions it twice; e.g. 'as the line
A is to the line B, so is the line B to the line C'; the line B, then, has been
mentioned twice, so that if the line B be assumed twice, the proportional terms
will be four); and the just, too, involves at least four terms, and the ratio
between one pair is the same as that between the other pair; for there is a
similar distinction between the persons and between the things. As the term A,
then, is to B, so will C be to D, and therefore, alternando, as A is to C, B
will be to D. Therefore also the whole is in the same ratio to the whole; and
this coupling the distribution effects, and, if the terms are so combined,
effects justly. The conjunction, then, of the term A with C and of B with D is
what is just in distribution, and this species of the just is intermediate, and
the unjust is what violates the proportion; for the proportional is
intermediate, and the just is proportional. (Mathematicians call this kind of
proportion geometrical; for it is in geometrical proportion that it follows that
the whole is to the whole as either part is to the corresponding part.) This
proportion is not continuous; for we cannot get a single term standing for a
person and a thing.
This, then, is what the
just is-the proportional; the unjust is what violates the proportion. Hence one
term becomes too great, the other too small, as indeed happens in practice; for
the man who acts unjustly has too much, and the man who is unjustly treated too
little, of what is good. In the case of evil the reverse is true; for the lesser
evil is reckoned a good in comparison with the greater evil, since the lesser
evil is rather to be chosen than the greater, and what is worthy of choice is
good, and what is worthier of choice a greater good.
This, then, is one
species of the just.
4
(B) The remaining one is
the rectificatory, which arises in connexion with transactions both voluntary
and involuntary. This form of the just has a different specific character from
the former. For the justice which distributes common possessions is always in
accordance with the kind of proportion mentioned above (for in the case also in
which the distribution is made from the common funds of a partnership it will be
according to the same ratio which the funds put into the business by the
partners bear to one another); and the injustice opposed to this kind of justice
is that which violates the proportion. But the justice in transactions between
man and man is a sort of equality indeed, and the injustice a sort of
inequality; not according to that kind of proportion, however, but according to
arithmetical proportion. For it makes no difference whether a good man has
defrauded a bad man or a bad man a good one, nor whether it is a good or a bad
man that has committed adultery; the law looks only to the distinctive character
of the injury, and treats the parties as equal, if one is in the wrong and the
other is being wronged, and if one inflicted injury and the other has received
it. Therefore, this kind of injustice being an inequality, the judge tries to
equalize it; for in the case also in which one has received and the other has
inflicted a wound, or one has slain and the other been slain, the suffering and
the action have been unequally distributed; but the judge tries to equalize by
means of the penalty, taking away from the gain of the assailant. For the term
'gain' is applied generally to such cases, even if it be not a term appropriate
to certain cases, e.g. to the person who inflicts a woundand 'loss' to the
sufferer; at all events when the suffering has been estimated, the one is called
loss and the other gain. Therefore the equal is intermediate between the greater
and the less, but the gain and the loss are respectively greater and less in
contrary ways; more of the good and less of the evil are gain, and the contrary
is loss; intermediate between them is, as we saw, equal, which we say is just;
therefore corrective justice will be the intermediate between loss and gain.
This is why, when people dispute, they take refuge in the judge; and to go to
the judge is to go to justice; for the nature of the judge is to be a sort of
animate justice; and they seek the judge as an intermediate, and in some states
they call judges mediators, on the assumption that if they get what is
intermediate they will get what is just. The just, then, is an intermediate,
since the judge is so. Now the judge restores equality; it is as though there
were a line divided into unequal parts, and he took away that by which the
greater segment exceeds the half, and added it to the smaller segment. And when
the whole has been equally divided, then they say they have 'their own'-i.e.
when they have got what is equal. The equal is intermediate between the greater
and the lesser line according to arithmetical proportion. It is for this reason
also that it is called just (sikaion), because it is a division into two equal
parts (sicha), just as if one were to call it sichaion; and the judge (sikastes)
is one who bisects (sichastes). For when something is subtracted from one of two
equals and added to the other, the other is in excess by these two; since if
what was taken from the one had not been added to the other, the latter would
have been in excess by one only. It therefore exceeds the intermediate by one,
and the intermediate exceeds by one that from which something was taken. By
this, then, we shall recognize both what we must subtract from that which has
more, and what we must add to that which has less; we must add to the latter
that by which the intermediate exceeds it, and subtract from the greatest that
by which it exceeds the intermediate. Let the lines AA', BB', CC' be equal to
one another; from the line AA' let the segment AE have been subtracted, and to
the line CC' let the segment CD have been added, so that the whole line DCC'
exceeds the line EA' by the segment CD and the segment CF; therefore it exceeds
the line BB' by the segment CD. (See diagram.)
These names, both loss
and gain, have come from voluntary exchange; for to have more than one's own is
called gaining, and to have less than one's original share is called losing,
e.g. in buying and selling and in all other matters in which the law has left
people free to make their own terms; but when they get neither more nor less but
just what belongs to themselves, they say that they have their own and that they
neither lose nor gain.
Therefore the just is
intermediate between a sort of gain and a sort of loss, viz. those which are
involuntary; it consists in having an equal amount before and after the
transaction.
5
Some think that
reciprocity is without qualification just, as the Pythagoreans said; for they
defined justice without qualification as reciprocity. Now 'reciprocity' fits
neither distributive nor rectificatory justice-yet people want even the justice
of Rhadamanthus to mean this:
Should a man suffer what
he did,
right justice would be
done
-for in many cases
reciprocity and rectificatory justice are not in accord; e.g. (1) if an official
has inflicted a wound, he should not be wounded in return, and if some one has
wounded an official, he ought not to be wounded only but punished in addition.
Further (2) there is a great difference between a voluntary and an involuntary
act. But in associations for exchange this sort of justice does hold men
together-reciprocity in accordance with a proportion and not on the basis of
precisely equal return. For it is by proportionate requital that the city holds
together. Men seek to return either evil for evil-and if they cana not do so,
think their position mere slavery-or good for good-and if they cannot do so
there is no exchange, but it is by exchange that they hold together. This is why
they give a prominent place to the temple of the Graces-to promote the requital
of services; for this is characteristic of grace-we should serve in return one
who has shown grace to us, and should another time take the initiative in
showing it.
Now proportionate return
is secured by cross-conjunction. Let A be a builder, B a shoemaker, C a house, D
a shoe. The builder, then, must get from the shoemaker the latter's work, and
must himself give him in return his own. If, then, first there is proportionate
equality of goods, and then reciprocal action takes place, the result we mention
will be effected. If not, the bargain is not equal, and does not hold; for there
is nothing to prevent the work of the one being better than that of the other;
they must therefore be equated. (And this is true of the other arts also; for
they would have been destroyed if what the patient suffered had not been just
what the agent did, and of the same amount and kind.) For it is not two doctors
that associate for exchange, but a doctor and a farmer, or in general people who
are different and unequal; but these must be equated. This is why all things
that are exchanged must be somehow comparable. It is for this end that money has
been introduced, and it becomes in a sense an intermediate; for it measures all
things, and therefore the excess and the defect-how many shoes are equal to a
house or to a given amount of food. The number of shoes exchanged for a house
(or for a given amount of food) must therefore correspond to the ratio of
builder to shoemaker. For if this be not so, there will be no exchange and no
intercourse. And this proportion will not be effected unless the goods are
somehow equal. All goods must therefore be measured by some one thing, as we
said before. Now this unit is in truth demand, which holds all things together
(for if men did not need one another's goods at all, or did not need them
equally, there would be either no exchange or not the same exchange); but money
has become by convention a sort of representative of demand; and this is why it
has the name 'money' (nomisma)-because it exists not by nature but by law (nomos)
and it is in our power to change it and make it useless. There will, then, be
reciprocity when the terms have been equated so that as farmer is to shoemaker,
the amount of the shoemaker's work is to that of the farmer's work for which it
exchanges. But we must not bring them into a figure of proportion when they have
already exchanged (otherwise one extreme will have both excesses), but when they
still have their own goods. Thus they are equals and associates just because
this equality can be effected in their case. Let A be a farmer, C food, B a
shoemaker, D his product equated to C. If it had not been possible for
reciprocity to be thus effected, there would have been no association of the
parties. That demand holds things together as a single unit is shown by the fact
that when men do not need one another, i.e. when neither needs the other or one
does not need the other, they do not exchange, as we do when some one wants what
one has oneself, e.g. when people permit the exportation of corn in exchange for
wine. This equation therefore must be established. And for the future
exchange-that if we do not need a thing now we shall have it if ever we do need
it-money is as it were our surety; for it must be possible for us to get what we
want by bringing the money. Now the same thing happens to money itself as to
goods-it is not always worth the same; yet it tends to be steadier. This is why
all goods must have a price set on them; for then there will always be exchange,
and if so, association of man with man. Money, then, acting as a measure, makes
goods commensurate and equates them; for neither would there have been
association if there were not exchange, nor exchange if there were not equality,
nor equality if there were not commensurability. Now in truth it is impossible
that things differing so much should become commensurate, but with reference to
demand they may become so sufficiently. There must, then, be a unit, and that
fixed by agreement (for which reason it is called money); for it is this that
makes all things commensurate, since all things are measured by money. Let A be
a house, B ten minae, C a bed. A is half of B, if the house is worth five minae
or equal to them; the bed, C, is a tenth of B; it is plain, then, how many beds
are equal to a house, viz. five. That exchange took place thus before there was
money is plain; for it makes no difference whether it is five beds that exchange
for a house, or the money value of five beds.
We have now defined the
unjust and the just. These having been marked off from each other, it is plain
that just action is intermediate between acting unjustly and being unjustly
treated; for the one is to have too much and the other to have too little.
Justice is a kind of mean, but not in the same way as the other virtues, but
because it relates to an intermediate amount, while injustice relates to the
extremes. And justice is that in virtue of which the just man is said to be a
doer, by choice, of that which is just, and one who will distribute either
between himself and another or between two others not so as to give more of what
is desirable to himself and less to his neighbour (and conversely with what is
harmful), but so as to give what is equal in accordance with proportion; and
similarly in distributing between two other persons. Injustice on the other hand
is similarly related to the unjust, which is excess and defect, contrary to
proportion, of the useful or hurtful. For which reason injustice is excess and
defect, viz. because it is productive of excess and defect-in one's own case
excess of what is in its own nature useful and defect of what is hurtful, while
in the case of others it is as a whole like what it is in one's own case, but
proportion may be violated in either direction. In the unjust act to have too
little is to be unjustly treated; to have too much is to act unjustly.
Let this be taken as our
account of the nature of justice and injustice, and similarly of the just and
the unjust in general.
6
Since acting unjustly
does not necessarily imply being unjust, we must ask what sort of unjust acts
imply that the doer is unjust with respect to each type of injustice, e.g. a
thief, an adulterer, or a brigand. Surely the answer does not turn on the
difference between these types. For a man might even lie with a woman knowing
who she was, but the origin of his might be not deliberate choice but passion.
He acts unjustly, then, but is not unjust; e.g. a man is not a thief, yet he
stole, nor an adulterer, yet he committed adultery; and similarly in all other
cases.
Now we have previously
stated how the reciprocal is related to the just; but we must not forget that
what we are looking for is not only what is just without qualification but also
political justice. This is found among men who share their life with a view to
selfsufficiency, men who are free and either proportionately or arithmetically
equal, so that between those who do not fulfil this condition there is no
political justice but justice in a special sense and by analogy. For justice
exists only between men whose mutual relations are governed by law; and law
exists for men between whom there is injustice; for legal justice is the
discrimination of the just and the unjust. And between men between whom there is
injustice there is also unjust action (though there is not injustice between all
between whom there is unjust action), and this is assigning too much to oneself
of things good in themselves and too little of things evil in themselves. This
is why we do not allow a man to rule, but rational principle, because a man
behaves thus in his own interests and becomes a tyrant. The magistrate on the
other hand is the guardian of justice, and, if of justice, then of equality
also. And since he is assumed to have no more than his share, if he is just (for
he does not assign to himself more of what is good in itself, unless such a
share is proportional to his merits-so that it is for others that he labours,
and it is for this reason that men, as we stated previously, say that justice is
'another's good'), therefore a reward must be given him, and this is honour and
privilege; but those for whom such things are not enough become tyrants.
The justice of a master
and that of a father are not the same as the justice of citizens, though they
are like it; for there can be no injustice in the unqualified sense towards
thing that are one's own, but a man's chattel, and his child until it reaches a
certain age and sets up for itself, are as it were part of himself, and no one
chooses to hurt himself (for which reason there can be no injustice towards
oneself). Therefore the justice or injustice of citizens is not manifested in
these relations; for it was as we saw according to law, and between people
naturally subject to law, and these as we saw' are people who have an equal
share in ruling and being ruled. Hence justice can more truly be manifested
towards a wife than towards children and chattels, for the former is household
justice; but even this is different from political justice.
7
Of political justice part
is natural, part legal, natural, that which everywhere has the same force and
does not exist by people's thinking this or that; legal, that which is
originally indifferent, but when it has been laid down is not indifferent, e.g.
that a prisoner's ransom shall be a mina, or that a goat and not two sheep shall
be sacrificed, and again all the laws that are passed for particular cases, e.g.
that sacrifice shall be made in honour of Brasidas, and the provisions of
decrees. Now some think that all justice is of this sort, because that which is
by nature is unchangeable and has everywhere the same force (as fire burns both
here and in Persia), while they see change in the things recognized as just.
This, however, is not true in this unqualified way, but is true in a sense; or
rather, with the gods it is perhaps not true at all, while with us there is
something that is just even by nature, yet all of it is changeable; but still
some is by nature, some not by nature. It is evident which sort of thing, among
things capable of being otherwise, is by nature, and which is not but is legal
and conventional, assuming that both are equally changeable. And in all other
things the same distinction will apply; by nature the right hand is stronger,
yet it is possible that all men should come to be ambidextrous. The things which
are just by virtue of convention and expediency are like measures; for wine and
corn measures are not everywhere equal, but larger in wholesale and smaller in
retail markets. Similarly, the things which are just not by nature but by human
enactment are not everywhere the same, since constitutions also are not the
same, though there is but one which is everywhere by nature the best. Of things
just and lawful each is related as the universal to its particulars; for the
things that are done are many, but of them each is one, since it is universal.
There is a difference
between the act of injustice and what is unjust, and between the act of justice
and what is just; for a thing is unjust by nature or by enactment; and this very
thing, when it has been done, is an act of injustice, but before it is done is
not yet that but is unjust. So, too, with an act of justice (though the general
term is rather 'just action', and 'act of justice' is applied to the correction
of the act of injustice).
Each of these must later
be examined separately with regard to the nature and number of its species and
the nature of the things with which it is concerned.
8
Acts just and unjust
being as we have described them, a man acts unjustly or justly whenever he does
such acts voluntarily; when involuntarily, he acts neither unjustly nor justly
except in an incidental way; for he does things which happen to be just or
unjust. Whether an act is or is not one of injustice (or of justice) is
determined by its voluntariness or involuntariness; for when it is voluntary it
is blamed, and at the same time is then an act of injustice; so that there will
be things that are unjust but not yet acts of injustice, if voluntariness be not
present as well. By the voluntary I mean, as has been said before, any of the
things in a man's own power which he does with knowledge, i.e. not in ignorance
either of the person acted on or of the instrument used or of the end that will
be attained (e.g. whom he is striking, with what, and to what end), each such
act being done not incidentally nor under compulsion (e.g. if A takes B's hand
and therewith strikes C, B does not act voluntarily; for the act was not in his
own power). The person struck may be the striker's father, and the striker may
know that it is a man or one of the persons present, but not know that it is his
father; a similar distinction may be made in the case of the end, and with
regard to the whole action. Therefore that which is done in ignorance, or though
not done in ignorance is not in the agent's power, or is done under compulsion,
is involuntary (for many natural processes, even, we knowingly both perform and
experience, none of which is either voluntary or involuntary; e.g. growing old
or dying). But in the case of unjust and just acts alike the injustice or
justice may be only incidental; for a man might return a deposit unwillingly and
from fear, and then he must not be said either to do what is just or to act
justly, except in an incidental way. Similarly the man who under compulsion and
unwillingly fails to return the deposit must be said to act unjustly, and to do
what is unjust, only incidentally. Of voluntary acts we do some by choice,
others not by choice; by choice those which we do after deliberation, not by
choice those which we do without previous deliberation. Thus there are three
kinds of injury in transactions between man and man; those done in ignorance are
mistakes when the person acted on, the act, the instrument, or the end that will
be attained is other than the agent supposed; the agent thought either that he
was not hiting any one or that he was not hitting with this missile or not
hitting this person or to this end, but a result followed other than that which
he thought likely (e.g. he threw not with intent to wound but only to prick), or
the person hit or the missile was other than he supposed. Now when (1) the
injury takes place contrary to reasonable expectation, it is a misadventure.
When (2) it is not contrary to reasonable expectation, but does not imply vice,
it is a mistake (for a man makes a mistake when the fault originates in him, but
is the victim of accident when the origin lies outside him). When (3) he acts
with knowledge but not after deliberation, it is an act of injustice-e.g. the
acts due to anger or to other passions necessary or natural to man; for when men
do such harmful and mistaken acts they act unjustly, and the acts are acts of
injustice, but this does not imply that the doers are unjust or wicked; for the
injury is not due to vice. But when (4) a man acts from choice, he is an unjust
man and a vicious man.
Hence acts proceeding
from anger are rightly judged not to be done of malice aforethought; for it is
not the man who acts in anger but he who enraged him that starts the mischief.
Again, the matter in dispute is not whether the thing happened or not, but its
justice; for it is apparent injustice that occasions rage. For they do not
dispute about the occurrence of the act-as in commercial transactions where one
of the two parties must be vicious-unless they do so owing to forgetfulness;
but, agreeing about the fact, they dispute on which side justice lies (whereas a
man who has deliberately injured another cannot help knowing that he has done
so), so that the one thinks he is being treated unjustly and the other
disagrees.
But if a man harms
another by choice, he acts unjustly; and these are the acts of injustice which
imply that the doer is an unjust man, provided that the act violates proportion
or equality. Similarly, a man is just when he acts justly by choice; but he acts
justly if he merely acts voluntarily.
Of involuntary acts some
are excusable, others not. For the mistakes which men make not only in ignorance
but also from ignorance are excusable, while those which men do not from
ignorance but (though they do them in ignorance) owing to a passion which is
neither natural nor such as man is liable to, are not excusable.
9
Assuming that we have
sufficiently defined the suffering and doing of injustice, it may be asked (1)
whether the truth in expressed in Euripides' paradoxical words:
I slew my mother, that's
my tale in brief.
Were you both willing, or
unwilling both?
Is it truly possible to
be willingly treated unjustly, or is all suffering of injustice the contrary
involuntary, as all unjust action is voluntary? And is all suffering of
injustice of the latter kind or else all of the former, or is it sometimes
voluntary, sometimes involuntary? So, too, with the case of being justly
treated; all just action is voluntary, so that it is reasonable that there
should be a similar opposition in either case-that both being unjustly and being
justly treated should be either alike voluntary or alike involuntary. But it
would be thought paradoxical even in the case of being justly treated, if it
were always voluntary; for some are unwillingly treated justly. (2) One might
raise this question also, whether every one who has suffered what is unjust is
being unjustly treated, or on the other hand it is with suffering as with
acting. In action and in passivity alike it is possible to partake of justice
incidentally, and similarly (it is plain) of injustice; for to do what is unjust
is not the same as to act unjustly, nor to suffer what is unjust as to be
treated unjustly, and similarly in the case of acting justly and being justly
treated; for it is impossible to be unjustly treated if the other does not act
unjustly, or justly treated unless he acts justly. Now if to act unjustly is
simply to harm some one voluntarily, and 'voluntarily' means 'knowing the person
acted on, the instrument, and the manner of one's acting', and the incontinent
man voluntarily harms himself, not only will he voluntarily be unjustly treated
but it will be possible to treat oneself unjustly. (This also is one of the
questions in doubt, whether a man can treat himself unjustly.) Again, a man may
voluntarily, owing to incontinence, be harmed by another who acts voluntarily,
so that it would be possible to be voluntarily treated unjustly. Or is our
definition incorrect; must we to 'harming another, with knowledge both of the
person acted on, of the instrument, and of the manner' add 'contrary to the wish
of the person acted on'? Then a man may be voluntarily harmed and voluntarily
suffer what is unjust, but no one is voluntarily treated unjustly; for no one
wishes to be unjustly treated, not even the incontinent man. He acts contrary to
his wish; for no one wishes for what he does not think to be good, but the
incontinent man does do things that he does not think he ought to do. Again, one
who gives what is his own, as Homer says Glaucus gave Diomede
Armour of gold for
brazen, the price of a
hundred beeves for nine,
is not unjustly
treated;
for though to give is in
his power, to be unjustly treated is not, but there must be some one to treat
him unjustly. It is plain, then, that being unjustly treated is not voluntary.
Of the questions we
intended to discuss two still remain for discussion; (3) whether it is the man
who has assigned to another more than his share that acts unjustly, or he who
has the excessive share, and (4) whether it is possible to treat oneself
unjustly. The questions are connected; for if the former alternative is possible
and the distributor acts unjustly and not the man who has the excessive share,
then if a man assigns more to another than to himself, knowingly and
voluntarily, he treats himself unjustly; which is what modest people seem to do,
since the virtuous man tends to take less than his share. Or does this statement
too need qualification? For (a) he perhaps gets more than his share of some
other good, e.g. of honour or of intrinsic nobility. (b) The question is solved
by applying the distinction we applied to unjust action; for he suffers nothing
contrary to his own wish, so that he is not unjustly treated as far as this
goes, but at most only suffers harm.
It is plain too that the
distributor acts unjustly, but not always the man who has the excessive share;
for it is not he to whom what is unjust appertains that acts unjustly, but he to
whom it appertains to do the unjust act voluntarily, i.e. the person in whom
lies the origin of the action, and this lies in the distributor, not in the
receiver. Again, since the word 'do' is ambiguous, and there is a sense in which
lifeless things, or a hand, or a servant who obeys an order, may be said to
slay, he who gets an excessive share does not act unjustly, though he 'does'
what is unjust.
Again, if the distributor
gave his judgement in ignorance, he does not act unjustly in respect of legal
justice, and his judgement is not unjust in this sense, but in a sense it is
unjust (for legal justice and primordial justice are different); but if with
knowledge he judged unjustly, he is himself aiming at an excessive share either
of gratitude or of revenge. As much, then, as if he were to share in the
plunder, the man who has judged unjustly for these reasons has got too much; the
fact that what he gets is different from what he distributes makes no
difference, for even if he awards land with a view to sharing in the plunder he
gets not land but money.
Men think that acting
unjustly is in their power, and therefore that being just is easy. But it is
not; to lie with one's neighbour's wife, to wound another, to deliver a bribe,
is easy and in our power, but to do these things as a result of a certain state
of character is neither easy nor in our power. Similarly to know what is just
and what is unjust requires, men think, no great wisdom, because it is not hard
to understand the matters dealt with by the laws (though these are not the
things that are just, except incidentally); but how actions must be done and
distributions effected in order to be just, to know this is a greater
achievement than knowing what is good for the health; though even there, while
it is easy to know that honey, wine, hellebore, cautery, and the use of the
knife are so, to know how, to whom, and when these should be applied with a view
to producing health, is no less an achievement than that of being a physician.
Again, for this very reason men think that acting unjustly is characteristic of
the just man no less than of the unjust, because he would be not less but even
more capable of doing each of these unjust acts; for he could lie with a woman
or wound a neighbour; and the brave man could throw away his shield and turn to
flight in this direction or in that. But to play the coward or to act unjustly
consists not in doing these things, except incidentally, but in doing them as
the result of a certain state of character, just as to practise medicine and
healing consists not in applying or not applying the knife, in using or not
using medicines, but in doing so in a certain way.
Just acts occur between
people who participate in things good in themselves and can have too much or too
little of them; for some beings (e.g. presumably the gods) cannot have too much
of them, and to others, those who are incurably bad, not even the smallest share
in them is beneficial but all such goods are harmful, while to others they are
beneficial up to a point; therefore justice is essentially something human.
10
Our next subject is
equity and the equitable (to epiekes), and their respective relations to justice
and the just. For on examination they appear to be neither absolutely the same
nor generically different; and while we sometime praise what is equitable and
the equitable man (so that we apply the name by way of praise even to instances
of the other virtues, instead of 'good' meaning by epieikestebon that a thing is
better), at other times, when we reason it out, it seems strange if the
equitable, being something different from the just, is yet praiseworthy; for
either the just or the equitable is not good, if they are different; or, if both
are good, they are the same.
These, then, are pretty
much the considerations that give rise to the problem about the equitable; they
are all in a sense correct and not opposed to one another; for the equitable,
though it is better than one kind of justice, yet is just, and it is not as
being a different class of thing that it is better than the just. The same
thing, then, is just and equitable, and while both are good the equitable is
superior. What creates the problem is that the equitable is just, but not the
legally just but a correction of legal justice. The reason is that all law is
universal but about some things it is not possible to make a universal statement
which shall be correct. In those cases, then, in which it is necessary to speak
universally, but not possible to do so correctly, the law takes the usual case,
though it is not ignorant of the possibility of error. And it is none the less
correct; for the error is in the law nor in the legislator but in the nature of
the thing, since the matter of practical affairs is of this kind from the start.
When the law speaks universally, then, and a case arises on it which is not
covered by the universal statement, then it is right, where the legislator fails
us and has erred by oversimplicity, to correct the omission-to say what the
legislator himself would have said had he been present, and would have put into
his law if he had known. Hence the equitable is just, and better than one kind
of justice-not better than absolute justice but better than the error that
arises from the absoluteness of the statement. And this is the nature of the
equitable, a correction of law where it is defective owing to its universality.
In fact this is the reason why all things are not determined by law, that about
some things it is impossible to lay down a law, so that a decree is needed. For
when the thing is indefinite the rule also is indefinite, like the leaden rule
used in making the Lesbian moulding; the rule adapts itself to the shape of the
stone and is not rigid, and so too the decree is adapted to the facts.
It is plain, then, what
the equitable is, and that it is just and is better than one kind of justice. It
is evident also from this who the equitable man is; the man who chooses and does
such acts, and is no stickler for his rights in a bad sense but tends to take
less than his share though he has the law oft his side, is equitable, and this
state of character is equity, which is a sort of justice and not a different
state of character.
11
Whether a man can treat
himself unjustly or not, is evident from what has been said. For (a) one class
of just acts are those acts in accordance with any virtue which are prescribed
by the law; e.g. the law does not expressly permit suicide, and what it does not
expressly permit it forbids. Again, when a man in violation of the law harms
another (otherwise than in retaliation) voluntarily, he acts unjustly, and a
voluntary agent is one who knows both the person he is affecting by his action
and the instrument he is using; and he who through anger voluntarily stabs
himself does this contrary to the right rule of life, and this the law does not
allow; therefore he is acting unjustly. But towards whom? Surely towards the
state, not towards himself. For he suffers voluntarily, but no one is
voluntarily treated unjustly. This is also the reason why the state punishes; a
certain loss of civil rights attaches to the man who destroys himself, on the
ground that he is treating the state unjustly.
Further (b) in that sense
of 'acting unjustly' in which the man who 'acts unjustly' is unjust only and not
bad all round, it is not possible to treat oneself unjustly (this is different
from the former sense; the unjust man in one sense of the term is wicked in a
particularized way just as the coward is, not in the sense of being wicked all
round, so that his 'unjust act' does not manifest wickedness in general). For (i)
that would imply the possibility of the same thing's having been subtracted from
and added to the same thing at the same time; but this is impossible-the just
and the unjust always involve more than one person. Further, (ii) unjust action
is voluntary and done by choice, and takes the initiative (for the man who
because he has suffered does the same in return is not thought to act unjustly);
but if a man harms himself he suffers and does the same things at the same time.
Further, (iii) if a man could treat himself unjustly, he could be voluntarily
treated unjustly. Besides, (iv) no one acts unjustly without committing
particular acts of injustice; but no one can commit adultery with his own wife
or housebreaking on his own house or theft on his own property,
In general, the question
'can a man treat himself unjustly?' is solved also by the distinction we applied
to the question 'can a man be voluntarily treated unjustly?'
(It is evident too that
both are bad, being unjustly treated and acting unjustly; for the one means
having less and the other having more than the intermediate amount, which plays
the part here that the healthy does in the medical art, and that good condition
does in the art of bodily training. But still acting unjustly is the worse, for
it involves vice and is blameworthy-involves vice which is either of the
complete and unqualified kind or almost so (we must admit the latter
alternative, because not all voluntary unjust action implies injustice as a
state of character), while being unjustly treated does not involve vice and
injustice in oneself. In itself, then, being unjustly treated is less bad, but
there is nothing to prevent its being incidentally a greater evil. But theory
cares nothing for this; it calls pleurisy a more serious mischief than a
stumble; yet the latter may become incidentally the more serious, if the fall
due to it leads to your being taken prisoner or put to death the enemy.)
Metaphorically and in
virtue of a certain resemblance there is a justice, not indeed between a man and
himself, but between certain parts of him; yet not every kind of justice but
that of master and servant or that of husband and wife. For these are the ratios
in which the part of the soul that has a rational principle stands to the
irrational part; and it is with a view to these parts that people also think a
man can be unjust to himself, viz. because these parts are liable to suffer
something contrary to their respective desires; there is therefore thought to be
a mutual justice between them as between ruler and ruled.
Let this be taken as our
account of justice and the other, i.e. the other moral, virtues.