Hello
again, dear reader.
For
today's discussion will be talking about friendship, because every
"Badass" needs a quality group of friends and colleagues to help them
be such a badass. The problem with friendship is. Sometimes it's hard to tell
the real friends from the not so real friends, which is why today dear reader.
We are going to not only discuss friendships and their importance, to
everyone's life, but more specifically, the three types of friendships that
everyone experiences, according to the grandfather of philosophy. Aristotle.
Hopefully by the end of the conversation dear reader you will be able to tell
who your true friends are. Or at the very least have a better understanding of
the types of relationships and the reasons why you have them with the people
that you do...
At
age 17, Aristotle enrolled in the Platonic Academy. He would stay there for 20
years.
Founded
by the father of Western philosophy, the Greek philosopher Plato, Aristotle was
the most promising student around. He asked many questions and answered even
more.
The
exact time of his departure from the Academy is disputed, but it’s said that he
left soon after Plato died due to his dislike of the direction that it
subsequently took. In the years following, he would even go on to argue against
many of his late teacher’s core ideas.
It’s
impossible to say how much Aristotle wrote, but even from the fraction of his
work that we have left today, there is a stunning amount of breadth in the
subjects he covered.
Every
field from astronomy and physics to ethics and economics has been influenced by
the work of Aristotle. For more than 2,000 years after his death, he has
remained one of the most widely read and quoted thinkers in the history of our
species.
While
his impact can still be felt in the many different subjects today, maybe the
most accurate of his observations relate to friendship. He saw it as one of the
true joys of life, and he felt that a life well-lived needed to be built around
such companionship. In his own words:
“In
poverty as well as in other misfortunes, people suppose that friends are their
only refuge. And friendship is a help to the young, in saving them from error,
just as it is also to the old, with a view to the care they require and their
diminished capacity for action stemming from their weakness; it is a help also
to those in their prime in performing noble actions, for ‘two going together’
are better able to think and to act.”
The accidental friendships
Aristotle
outlined two kinds of common friendships that are more accidental than
intentional.
The
first is a friendship of utility. In this kind of relationship, the two parties
are not in it for the affection of one another, but more so because each party
receives a benefit in exchange.
It’s
not permanent in nature, and whenever the benefit ends, so does the
relationship that brought the parties together. Aristotle observed this to be
more common in older folks.
An
example of this would be a business or a work relationship. You may enjoy the
time you spend together, but once the situation changes, so does the nature of
your connection.
Similarly,
the second kind of accidental friendship is one based on pleasure. This one,
however, is more common in people that are younger. It’s the kind of
relationship frequently seen among college friends or people who participate on
the same sports team.
The
source of such a friendship is more emotional, and it’s often the most
short-lived of the relationships. It’s fine for as long as the two parties gain
enjoyment through a mutual interest in something external, but it ends as soon
as either tastes or preferences change.
Many
young people go through different phases in their views on enjoyment, and quite
often, the people in their lives tend to change as the phase they’re in
recalibrates over time.
Most
of the friendships that many of us have fall into these two categories, and
while Aristotle didn’t necessarily see them as bad, he did feel that their
depth limited their quality.
It’s
fine, and even necessary, to have accidental friendships, but there is far more
out there.
The friendship of the good
The
final form of friendship that Aristotle outlined is also the most preferable
out of the three.
Rather
than utility or pleasure, this kind of relationship is based on a mutual
appreciation of the virtues that the other party holds dear. It’s the people
themselves and the qualities that they represent that provides the incentive
for the two parties to be in each other’s lives.
Rather
than being short-lived, such a relationship often lasts until the end, and
there is quite generally a base level of goodness required in each person for
it to exist in the first place.
People
that lack empathy or care for others seldom develop these kinds of
relationships because, more often than not, their preference is to look for
pleasure or utility. On top of that, friendships of virtue take time and trust
to build. They depend on mutual growth occurring.
You’re
a lot more likely to connect at this level with someone when you’ve seen them
at their worst and watched them grow from that or if you’ve both endured mutual
hardship together.
Beyond
the depth and intimacy, the beauty of such relationships is that they
automatically include the rewards of the other two kinds of friendship. They’re
pleasurable and beneficial.
When
you respect a person and care for them, you gain joy from being with them. If
they’re a good enough person to warrant such a relationship to begin with, then
there is utility, too.
These
relationships require time and intention, but when they do blossom, they do so
with trust, admiration, and awe. They bring with them some of the sweeter joys
that life has to offer.
All you need to know
If
you’re someone who has been read for over 2,000 years, there is usually a good
reason.
Not
everything Aristotle wrote is considered relevant today, and many of his
assumptions have since been argued against, but given the originality of his
ideas for the time that he lived in, it’s hard not to be impressed by his mind.
Few names in history are as influential.
He
taught us to examine the world empirically, and he inspired generations of
thinkers and philosophers to consider the role and value of ethics in the
everyday conduct of our lives.
For
the average person, however, the most relevant of his ideas relate to the
importance of good relationships. He was particularly curious about the
intention of friendship.
While
he saw the value in accidental friendships based on pleasure and utility, he
felt that their impermanence diminished their potential. They lacked depth and
a solid foundation.
Instead,
he argued for the cultivation of virtuous friendships built with intention and
based on a mutual appreciation of character and goodness rather than on some
transactional value.
He
knew that such a friendship could only be strengthened over time and that if it
did thrive, it would last for life. To Aristotle, few things came close to the
value of such a relationship.
It
makes sense. At the end of the day, the bonds we forge with those close to us
directly shape the quality of our lives. We are, and we live through, the
people we spend time with.
For
most things, life is long enough. It is, however, too short for the wrong kinds
of friendship.
True friendship is invaluable. My best friend lives far away, but when we get together, it's as if we've never been apart. She is someone I can count on no matter what happens. Or, as she says, we will always be friends because we know too much about each other! Some friends come and go - we may have fond memories of those people, but our life goes on. I think true friendship happens when people share the same zest for life, the same values and belief system. One of my very good friends told me that she only has good friends, because life is too short to surround ourselves with toxic people. This is a timely blog, since the holiday season is a time for friends and family.
ReplyDelete