Good Citizen
The good man and the good citizen are not one and the same. What can be
said
about one cannot be necessarily said about the other. It is essential
for the
good man to be a good citizen. It is not, though, vital for the good
citizen to
be a good man. This distinction is important to make, because it
helps one
understand that the qualities a good man possesses far supersede
those of a good
citizen. A good citizen does what is best for the community,
his city. As long
as he is no harm to his surroundings, and cares for the
improvement and
betterment of his city, he is a good citizen. Who a person is
doesn't greatly
affect what kind of citizen he will be. What if a man is a
secret murderer? If
we were to say that he only kills people outside of his
city, would he be
affecting the city in any way? If he was a great politician
and lived this
secret life as well would he still be a great citizen? The
answer is yes. This
is because the good citizen doesn't have to care about
others. He can allow his
desires to overpower his calculating. He doesn't
have to have a well-ordered
soul. In other words, he doesn't have to be a
good man. Aristotle chooses to
search for the difference between the good man
and the good citizen by examining
and analyzing their virtues. He concludes
that, "Hence, the virtue of a
citizen must be suited to his constitution.
Consequently, if indeed there are
several kinds of constitution, it is clear
that there cannot be a single virtue
that is the virtue-of a good citizen.
But the good man, we say, does express a
single virtue: the complete one.
Evidently, then, it is possible for someone to
be a good citizen without
having acquired the virtue expressed by a good
man" (1276b). What Aristotle
doesn't tell us is who is better off. Is it
sufficient to be the good citizen
or is it definitely more satisfying to be the
good man? The good man is
recognizably superior to the good citizen. The good
man possesses everything
that is good. He does what is just and what is just is
beneficial to himself
and to those around him. His soul is completely
well-ordered and, therefore,
cannot allow for his desires to take over and
commit evil or injustice of any
kind. This can't be said about the good citizen
and that is what makes the
good man superior. He is the good citizen and a whole
lot more. The
distinction between the good citizen and the good man is an
important one to
make. If it is to be assumed that they are equal, then we
wouldn't even have
a grasp on the definition of the complete virtue. It would be
assumed that
there isn't just one way a person should be, considering the good
citizen's
virtue is dependent on his varying kind of constitution. By making
the
distinction, an example is set for others to follow. It is as if someone
is
saying, "This is the good man so try to be like him." If it
were
believed that the good citizen is the same as the good man, there would
exist a
lot more injustice in the
world.