Wolt, Daniel2023-02-162023-02-162022-010022-5053http://hdl.handle.net/11693/111418In Eudemian Ethics VIII.3, Aristotle treats a virtue that he calls kalokagathia, "nobility-and-goodness." This virtue appears to be quite important, and he even identifies it with "perfect virtue" (EEVIII.3, 1249a17). This makes it puzzling that the Nicomachean Ethics, a text that largely parallels the Eudemian Ethics, does not discuss kalokagathia at all. I argue that the reason for this difference has to do with the role that the intellectual virtue practical wisdom (phronesis) plays in these treatises. The Nicomachean Ethics, I argue, makes use of a more expansive conception of phronesis than does the Eudemian Ethics. Hence, the work that is done by kalokagathia in the Eudemian Ethics-crucially, accounting for the unity of the virtues-is done in the Nicomachean Ethics by phronesis.EnglishAristotleKalokagathiaPhronêsisPractical wisdomEudemian EthicsCommon booksPhronêsis and Kalokagathia in Eudemian Ethics VIII.3Article10.1353/hph.2022.00001538-4586