"A sophisticated and illuminating study of central questions about
Aristotle's views on practical reason and the ultimate good.
Cooper's three chapters . . . examine familiar exegetical puzzles
in a fresh and challenging way; but they also . . . raise new and
fruitful questions about the philosophical merits and implications
of Aristotle's theories. . . . He writes vigorously and lucidly,
with both scholarly rigor and philosophical imagination." --T. H.
Irwin in Archiv fur Geschichte der Philosophie
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