a virtue is a good quality in someone's character; thinking + doing what is morally right + avoiding what is wrong
virtue ethics is a character-based system
Aristotle outlines how the system works in the quote "we are what we repeatedly do"
unlike other ethical systems, virtue ethics is concerned with the process of how to become a moral person, rather than the process of moral decision-making
Aristotle said we should strive for eudaimonia
we can reach eudaimonia through cultivating the right behaviours (virtues) + practicing them so they become habit
Aristotle defines eudaimonia as a state of action; a person in eudaimonia is fully content all the time
the Function Argument suggests that something is 'good' if it fulfils its function: e.g. a good knife is one that works well + fulfils its purpose - so it would have a sharp blade, an ergonomic handle + cuts well
the hierarchy of souls is as follows
humans (rational) ⬇️
animals (sensitive)⬇️
plants (vegetative)
Aristotle describes a 'good life' as one "in which we reason well"
someone's moral virtues should be assessed across a persons complete life
the 2 aspects of the soul Aristotle defines are the rational and non-rational
the rational soul holds the intellectual + practical virtues
an intellectual virtue example would be doing maths; practical virtues example would be understanding, judgement + practical wisdom
intellectual virtues contribute to a good life as they are under the control of reason
the non-rational soul holds moral virtues - or virtues of character; e.g. courage, patience. these are formed by habit
a virtuous person must:
know what they are doing in any situation + not act through ignorance
must choose to act virtuously
the 5 primary intellectual virtues are: (in latin)
techne
episteme
phronesis
nous
sophia
techne = art, technical skill
episteme = scientific knowledge
phronesis = practical wisdom, prudence
nous = intelligence, intuition
sophia = wisdom
the 4 secondary virtues:
resourcefulness
understanding
judgement
cleverness
a phronimos is a man of practical reason - a good judge of ethical matters
there are 12 moral virtues
the golden mean is the median between 2 extremes of deficiency + excess
examples of the vice of deficiency, golden mean, vice of excess:
want of ambition - right ambition - over ambition
cowardice - courage - rashness
surliness - friendliness - obsequious
sarcasm - sincerity - boastfulness
callousness - just resentment - spitefulness
an example of a situation with the golden mean: a soldier is left behind in battle
the vice of deficiency would be cowardice: leaving the soldier behind
the golden mean would be courage: organising a group then going on a rescue mission
the vice of excess would be rashness: going straight into save with no planning or awareness