virtue ethics

Subdecks (2)

Cards (54)

  • 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
  • the 4 cardinal virtues:
    • prudence
    • justice
    • temperance
    • fortitude
  • the 3 theological virtues:
    • faith
    • hope
    • charity, love