This document provides an overview of Aristotelian virtue ethics. It discusses Aristotle as the most important virtue ethicist and his view that the good life involves fulfilling one's human function through rational activity in accordance with virtue. Key concepts explained include eudaimonia (human flourishing), arete (virtue or excellence), and phronesis (practical wisdom). The document also discusses Aristotle's view that friendship and external goods are necessary for eudaimonia in addition to virtue, and analyzes what makes a virtue conducive to human flourishing.
This document provides an overview of Aristotelian virtue ethics. It discusses Aristotle as the most important virtue ethicist and his view that the good life involves fulfilling one's human function through rational activity in accordance with virtue. Key concepts explained include eudaimonia (human flourishing), arete (virtue or excellence), and phronesis (practical wisdom). The document also discusses Aristotle's view that friendship and external goods are necessary for eudaimonia in addition to virtue, and analyzes what makes a virtue conducive to human flourishing.
This document provides an overview of Aristotelian virtue ethics. It discusses Aristotle as the most important virtue ethicist and his view that the good life involves fulfilling one's human function through rational activity in accordance with virtue. Key concepts explained include eudaimonia (human flourishing), arete (virtue or excellence), and phronesis (practical wisdom). The document also discusses Aristotle's view that friendship and external goods are necessary for eudaimonia in addition to virtue, and analyzes what makes a virtue conducive to human flourishing.
This document provides an overview of Aristotelian virtue ethics. It discusses Aristotle as the most important virtue ethicist and his view that the good life involves fulfilling one's human function through rational activity in accordance with virtue. Key concepts explained include eudaimonia (human flourishing), arete (virtue or excellence), and phronesis (practical wisdom). The document also discusses Aristotle's view that friendship and external goods are necessary for eudaimonia in addition to virtue, and analyzes what makes a virtue conducive to human flourishing.
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VIRTUE ETHICS
INSTRUCTOR: LJ ZAPHAN LAMBOLOTO, MA CAND.
FOUNDATION UNIVERSITY EXPANDED LEARNING (FUEL)
This Photo by Unknown Author is licensed under CC BY-SA
ARISTOTELIA N VIRTUE ETHICS ARISTOTLE (384 BC – 322 BC) ARISTOTLE IS CONSIDERED TO BE THE MOST IMPORTANT VIRTUE ETHICIST. PLATO SOCRATES ARISTOTLE PLATO: THE THREE SOULS
Intellectual soul whose virtue is wisdom, the most
important virtue. Intellectual soul should rule over the other parts of the souls.
The will-soul whose virtue is courage which is the second
most important virtue.
Desire-soul whose virtue is moderation which is the third
most important virtue. HOW TO LIFE A FLOURISHING LIFE? • Aristotle attempts to identify what are the ARISTOTELIAN characteristics of human being that PHILOSOPHY differentiate it from other species. AND THE • Every species has its own role in the universe. PLACE OF • It is the fulfilling its role well that defines VIRTUE ETHICS what is the ultimate good of that thing or animal. • When one does what one is supposed to do, on feels fulfillment. • In other words, when one is what is supposed to be, one is happy. • Happiness/satisfaction is considered to HAPPINESS be a good thing. • In fact, happiness is the ONLY really good thing in the sense that we won’t want it for the sake of another thing (as a tool) but for its own sake. • There are natural criteria for judging whether the act leads to happiness (eudaimonia) to misery • These criteria are defined by what the HUMAN BEING human being (as a species) is. AS AN ANIMAL • By observing, what makes human being happy (eudaimonia) and what make him suffer, one can find out what kind of acts are virtuous. • Ergon (Function) KEY CONCEPTS OF • Eudaimonia (Flourishing) ARISTOTELIAN • Arete (Excellence or Virtue) VIRTUE ETHICS • Phronesis (practical or moral wisdom) • What is the function of human being? Aristotle asks what is the ergon (“function,” “task,” “work”) of a human being is, and argues that it consists in activity of the rational part of the soul in accordance with virtue. One important component of this argument is 1. ERGON expressed in terms of distinctions he makes in (FUNCTION) his psychological and biological works. The soul is analyzed into a connected series of capacities: the nutritive soul is responsible for growth and reproduction, the locomotive soul for motion, the perceptive soul for perception, and so on. • Human beings are the only species that has not only these lower capacities but a rational soul as well. • The good of a human being must have something to do WHAT IS THE with being human; and what sets humanity off from other species, giving us the potential to live a better FUNCTION OF life, is our capacity to guide ourselves by using reason. HUMAN • If we use reason well, we live well as human beings; BEING? (CONT) or, to be more precise, using reason well over the course of a full life is what happiness consists in. • Doing anything well requires virtue or excellence, and therefore living well consists in activities caused by the rational soul in accordance with virtue or excellence. • Plant soul – capacity for nourishment THREE and reproduction DIFFERENT • Animal soul –capacities of perception KINDS OF SOULS and self-motion • Intellectual soul – capacity to reason • Eudaimonia is standardly translated as "happiness" or "flourishing" and occasionally as "well-being.“ • Each translation has its disadvantages. "flourishing" - animals and even plants can flourish but 2. • eudaimonia is possibly only for rational beings. EUDAIMONIA "happiness“ – in modern understanding it connotes (HUMAN something which is subjectively determined. It is for FLOURISHING) me, not for you, to pronounce on whether I am happy. But according to classical thinkers I may have wrong idea about what eudaimonia is and therefore think that I am have eudaimon but I fact I don’t. • comparison: I might think that I am healthy but am not • Eudaimonia is a moralised, or "value-laden" concept of happiness, something like "true" or "real" happiness or "the sort of happiness worth seeking or having.“ • Thereby virtue ethicists claim that a human life devoted to physical pleasure or the EUDAIMONIA – acquisition of wealth is not eudaimon, but a THE TRUE wasted life HAPPINESS • All standard versions of virtue ethics agree that living a life in accordance with virtue is necessary for eudaimonia. • Eudaimonia involves virtuous life – virtues are goals in themselves, not instruments for achieving eudaimonia. IS SOMETHING • Aristotle says that virtue is necessary but not sufficient ELSE THAN — what is also needed are external goods that are (to VIRTUES an extent) a matter of luck: NEEDED IN • Health ORDER TO Wealth ACHIEVE Friends Functional society EUDAIMONIA? • Friendship is one of the most important virtues in achieving the goal of eudaimonia (happiness). • While there are different kinds of friendship, the highest is one that is based on virtue HAPPINESS (arête). AND • This type of friendship is based on a person FRIENDSHIP wishing the best for their friends regardless of utility or pleasure. • Aristotle calls it a “... complete sort of friendship between people who are good and alike in virtue ...” • Friendship based on virtue is long lasting and tough to obtain because these types of people are hard to come by and it takes a lot of work THE SUPREME to have a complete, virtuous friendship. VALUE OF • Aristotle notes that one cannot have a large FRIENDSHIP number of friends because of the amount of time and care that a virtuous friendship requires. • Aristotle values friendship so highly that he argues friendship supersedes justice and honor. • > First of all, friendship seems to be so valued by people that no one would choose to live without friends. • People who value honor will likely seek out either flattery or those who have more power than they do, in order that they may obtain personal gain through these relationships. • Aristotle believes that the love of friendship is greater than this because it can be enjoyed as it is. “Being loved, however, people enjoy for its own sake, and for this reason it would seem it is something better than being honoured and that friendship is chosen for its own sake”. • The emphasis on enjoyment here is noteworthy: a virtuous friendship is one that is most enjoyable since it combines pleasure and virtue together, thus fulfilling our emotional and intellectual natures. • Eudaimonism - the virtues are what enable a human being to be eudaimon because the virtues just are those character traits that benefit their possessor WHAT MAKES in that way, barring bad luck. VIRTUE A • Pluralism - the good life is the morally meritorious life, the morally VIRTUE THAT meritorious life is one that is responsive to the demands of the world. The virtues just are those character traits in virtue of which their possessor is thus PROMOTES responsive. EUDAIMONIA? • Perfectionism or naturalism - the good life is the life characteristically lived by someone who is good qua human being, and the virtues enable their possessor to live such a life because the virtues just are those character traits that make their possessor good qua human being (an excellent specimen of her kind.) • Arete could be translated “excellence”, standard translation, however, is “virtue” • A virtue such as honesty or generosity is not just a tendency to do what is honest or generous, nor is it to be helpfully specified as a "desirable" or VIRTUE "morally valuable" character trait.
(ARETE) • A character trait —a disposition to be behave in certain way
• Virtue is not like a habit which is more specific, action oriented, and related to something particular (habit of drinking tea) • Virtue is more “general” in nature: it enables its possessor to evaluate things in an appropriate way so that one has – as a result of this virtue - right kinds of emotions, attitudes, desires, perceptions, expectations, sensibilities. • Virtue enables one to make right choices from the point of view of eudaimonia (flourishing life). • Phronesis is something that the virtuous morally mature adult has that nice children, including nice adolescents, lack. • Both have good intentions, but the child is much more prone to mess things up because he is ignorant of what he needs to know PHRONESIS – in order to do what he intends. AN IMPORTANT • Children and adolescents often harm those they intend to benefit ELEMENT OF either because they do not know how to set about securing the PRACTICAL benefit or, more importantly, because their understanding of REASON what is beneficial and harmful is limited and often mistaken. • Such ignorance in small children is rarely, if ever culpable, and frequently not in adolescents, but it usually is in adults. • Adults are culpable if they mess things up by being thoughtless, insensitive, reckless, impulsive, shortsighted, and by assuming that what suits them will suit everyone instead of taking a more objective viewpoint. • There are natural criteria for judging whether the act is leads to happiness (eudaimonia) to misery THE ANIMAL • These criteria are defined by what the human CALLED ”HUMAN being (as a species) is. BEING” • By observing, what makes human being happy (eudaimonia) and what make him suffer, one can find out what kind of acts are virtuous. • People who fail to achieve the goal, do so because their soul are not in balance
FAILURE • The unbalanced soul strives for wrong
things in the wrong way in the guidance of uncontrolled and distorted desires. • The good life can only be achieved by striving for the best things in the right way. • The best things are truth, goodness, and SUCCESS beauty. • Only the virtuous soul can achieve happiness. • To be happy, you need to be virtuous. WHAT ARE VIRTUES AND WHAT VIRTUES ARE THERE? THE ARISTOTELIAN • The virtuous (right) conduct as a mean between two MEAN vices of excess. THE GOLDEN MEAN • Virtue is a “golden mean” between the extremes of excess and deficiency Courage, for example, is a mean regarding the feeling of fear, between the deficiency of VIRTUE rashness (too little fear) and the excess of cowardice (too much fear). Benevolence is a mean between giving to people who don’t deserve it and not giving to anyone at all. • The mean is “relative to ourselves,” indicating that one person’s mean may be another person’s extreme. • Milo the wrestler, as Aristotle puts it, needs PERSONAL more gruel than a normal person, and his mean DIFFERENCES diet will vary accordingly. • Similarly for the moral virtues. Aristotle suggests that some people are born with weaker wills than others; for these people, it may actually be a mean to flee in battle (the extremes being to get slaughtered or commit suicide). • No fundamental principles Virtue ethics doesn’t provide fundamental principles that would amount into decision CRITICISM procedure for determining what to do. AGAINST VIRTUE ETHICS - Reply: it is not realistic to hope that there are such principles - Principles and logic are not enough to determine what to do. • Different cultures embody different virtues, and hence what is virtuous is relative to particular culture. Therefore, one type can of action can be both right and THE PROBLEM wrong depending on the culture. OF CULTURAL *this is not helpful for anyone who wants to do what is RELATIVISM right. Reply: All other normative theories have the same problem. TWO KINDS OF VIRTUES
INTELLECTUAL MORAL VIRTUES
VIRTUES 1. Theoretical intelligence (nous) is the human faculty that apprehends fundamental principles such as the laws of thinking and other fundamental truths. • Intelligence Apprehends these truths directly and TWO KINDS OF without demonstration or inference. INTELLECTUAL *This is unique to humans and gods. VIRTUES *Theoretical intelligence cannot be learned. *All people have some theoretical intelligence, some people have a lot of it. • This is the ability to make right judgment on practical 2. PRACTICAL issues.
WISDOM *it can be learned
*old people normally have more of it than the young. 2. MORAL VIRTUES • A moral virtue is the ability to be reasonable in actions, desires and emotions. For example, courage is the ability to deal with fear in a reasonable way. *Courage is the reasonable mean between cowardice and foolhardiness or rashness. • A virtue is the mean between two extremes, a vice of deficiency and a vice of excess. In the case of courage, cowardice would be the vice of deficiency and foolhardiness would be the vice of excess. • Moral virtue is the outcome of habit. • Virtues are not implanted on us by nature. This is because, we acquire virtues by exercising them • All kind of good life is life in the guidance of reason. TWO KINDS OF The life devoted to study and thinking GOOD LIFE 1. The good life in which the subject devotes himself to abstract contemplation of knowledge. *This is truly the best way of life, but it is not within the reach of all men. 2. The other alternative is active life in society which involves taking ACTIVE LIFE IN part in all the activities that human SOCIETY beings undertake to make their own life and the life of their society better. PURSUE VIRTUE! SEE YOU NEXT CLASS!
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