Analysis Of Confessions By Saint Augustine

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In Confessions by Saint Augustine, he focuses on his spiritual journey towards God. Mainly, he discusses the effect friendship has had on his journey. Augustine’s crime of stealing a pear proves to alter his soul for the worse. The pear was stolen due to peer pressure inflicted upon Augustine by his friends. Thus, Augustine believes friendships can only cause harm to people and lead them in the wrong direction. Compared to Aristotle’s positive outlook on friendship, Augustine’s views are negative in nature. The death of his friend, however, leads him to realize the immense importance of friendship. Augustine initially believes his friends are detrimental to his relationship with God, but as he continues to examine the life that he has lived, he comes to the conclusion that friendship is what brings him closer to God. Due to peer pressure, Augustine steals a pear from a tree while he’s rebelliously acting out with his friends. What is troubling is that he did not steal the pear because he enjoyed the taste or genuinely wanted it, but rather, he committed this crime due to a wicked desire for sin. He has an overwhelming love for sin that …show more content…

This viewpoint differs from Aristotle’s ideas on friendship. He believed the key principles were pleasure, utility, and virtue. Augustine saw friendship as a negative aspect of life whereas, Aristotle saw it as an essential part of life. Lauren Pangle, author of Aristotle and the Philosophy of Friendship, regards friendship as, “both necessary and noble, and the ways in which the necessity and nobility of friendship are intertwined.” The need for friendship is defined as “rich and broad” including “the needs not only for survival but also for natural fulfillment.” Aristotle argues that friendship is good for us and makes us content. While on the other hand, Augustine believes friendship is a destructive concept that leads people to

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