Aristotle
said in his book, Rhetoric:
'Thus every action must be due to one or other of seven
causes: chance, nature, compulsion, habit, reasoning, anger, or appetite.'
He suggests that all actions are due either to emotion or
reason and that we seek pleasant things and act to reduce pain, and he predates
Freud's pleasure-pain
principle by over 2000 years.
Chance
events affect us all the time, and although some have little effect in changing
what we do, a number of others force us to act or otherwise motivate us into
action.
'The
things that happen by chance are all those whose cause cannot be determined,
that have no purpose, and that happen neither always nor usually nor in any
fixed way.'
Natural
forces are those 'originating in the body, such as the desire for nourishment,
namely hunger and thirst' as well as other things, like the desire to
procreate.
'Those
things happen by nature which have a fixed and internal cause; they take place
uniformly, either always or usually.'
Compulsion
occurs when we feel that we must act, even though we may not want to act on the
compulsion. This may be conformity with the law or dysfunctional
obsessive-compulsive behavior.
'Those
things happen through compulsion which take place contrary to the desire or
reason of the doer, yet through his own agency.'
Habit is automatic
action, and Aristotle said 'Acts are done from habit which men do because they
have often done them before.' Although compulsion is unpleasant and un-useful
repetition of action, habit is pleasant and generally useful.
'Habit,
whether acquired by mere familiarity or by effort, belongs to the class of
pleasant things, for there are many actions not naturally pleasant which men
perform with pleasure, once they have become used to them.'
Aristotle
points out that rational and reasoned action are to defined ends, achieving
something that serves personal goals.
'Actions
are due to reasoning when, in view of any of the goods already mentioned, they
appear useful either as ends or as means to an end, and are performed for that
reason.'
He also
notes that when we act in a way that we believe to be rational then we also
believe that it is good.
'Rational
craving is a craving for good, i.e. a wish -- nobody wishes for anything unless
he thinks it good. Irrational craving is twofold, viz. anger and appetite.'
Sometimes
interpreted as 'passion', anger can lead to extreme action.
Anger is
closely related to revenge, and anger curiously lessens when there is no
prospect of vengeance.
"To
passion and anger are due all acts of revenge...no one grows angry with
a person on whom there is no prospect of taking vengeance, and we feel
comparatively little anger, or none at all, with those who are much our
superiors in power."
Sometimes
interpreted as 'desire', appetite is 'craving for pleasure'.
Although
anger serves negative motivation, 'Appetite is the cause of all actions that
appear pleasant'.
Aristotle
pointed out that wealth or poverty is not a cause of action, although the
appetite for wealth may well motivate.
'Nor,
again, is action due to wealth or poverty; it is of course true that poor men,
being short of money, do have an appetite for it, and that rich men, being able
to command needless pleasures, do have an appetite for such pleasures: but
here, again, their actions will be due not to wealth or poverty but to
appetite.'
These are
all motivations that drive people in different ways, and some people are more
affected by some causes than by others.
If you can
understand how the causes affect people in specific ways, then you may be
better able to influence them and motivate them effectively.
TJ
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