Garcés Giraldo, Luís FernandoHuertas Díaz, OmarArboleda López, Adriana Patricia2018-07-262018-07-262017Revista Lasallista de Investigación Vol. 14 N. 21794-4449http://hdl.handle.net/10567/1950From the aristotelean perspective, the differences between a friend and a flatterer are established, describing the essential elements which constitute a true friendship relationship, where elements of ethics as an essential virtue and self-knowledge come together. In this sense, it is established, following the Stagirite, that one have a friendship relationship without these conditions: 1) doing good, or what seems to be good, to others; 2) wishing that your friend exists and loves for the love of their own friend; 3) spending time with and choosing the same things as your friend; 4) sharing your friend’s happiness and sorrows. Conversely, there can be no friendship if there are no conditions of equality, similar virtue and reciprocity between friends; where one wishes good for the other as much as for oneself.esCorporación Universitaria LasallistaAduladorAmistadAristótelesÉticaAutoconocimientoEl amigo en Aristóteles como posibilidad de autoconocimiento y las diferencias con un aduladorThe friend in Aristotle as a possibility for selfknowledge and the differences between a friend and a flattererO amigo em aristóteles como possibilidade de autoconhecimento e as diferenças com um aduladorArticle