Zusammenfassung der Ressource
A2 Ethics - Virtue Ethics
- Eudaimonia
- Happiness and well-being through being successful or
fulfilled. it's the outcome of being virtuous.
- We create a good
life through
cultivating virtues/
- Well-being, peace
and goodwill to all +
physical good.
- Holistic philosophy
(deals with the whole
picture). Must have a
social context, the end
result enables people to
live together.
- 3 aspects to happiness:
- enjoyment
- freedom
- Philosophy
- People who
can maintain
all 3 have the
virtue of
wisdom.
- Not easily or quickly
achieved. We must add "in
a complete life".
Anmerkungen:
- "For one swallow does not make a summer, nor does one day; and so too one day, or a short time, does not make a man blessed and happy."
- Ethical theory found in the
quality, correct manner or
disposition (hexis) of human
beings. Developing the correct
character (ethos) to behave
virtuously and so be morally
correct.
- Moral and intellectual virtues
- Moral
- Acquired through habit,
developed through practice.
- Courage,
temperance, liberality,
generosity, pride,
right/proper ambition,
patience, truthfulness,
wittiness, friendliness,
modesty, righteous
indignation.
- Intellectual
- Developed through education.
- Intelligence, practical
reason, theoretical
reason, understanding
& good sense.
- Doctrine of the mean
- Need to balance excess and
deficiency of each virtue
Anlagen:
- 3 types of person:
- Sophron = naturally
lives in the mean without
effort
- Enkrates = tempted but
has will power so lives in
the mean
- Akrates =weak-willed,
can't live in the mean
by overcoming
temptation
- Cardinal virtues + Capital vices
- Moral Cardinal Virtues:
courage and temperance
- Intellectual Cardinal
Virtues: justice and wisdom
- Cardinal virtues are most important to develop
- Wisdom manages and drives all other virtures
- Capital Vices NOT Aristotle's
idea. Proposed by Christian
thinkers much later.
- The 7 deadly sins e.g pride,
avarice, lust, envy, gluttony,
sloth etc.
- Modern virtue ethics
- MacIntyre
- E.g. Greek heroes were
defined by their actions,
virtues and vices.
- Virtues such as truthfulness, courage
and justice are essential to maintain a
good, moral character but also the
integrity of a community.
- Internal and external goods
- Internal goods are actions
that are obvious and direct
e.g. giving money to the poor.
- External goods produced out of moral acts
e.g. inspiring others to behave morally.
- The 3 archetypal
characters
(bureaucratic manager,
rich aesthete and
therapist).
- Dominate the
ethos of
modern society
and obscure
true virtue.
- They use people, money
or materialism as ways of
manipulating others for
self-interest.
- The ideal character
as a role model of
modern society is the
philosopher.
- Foot
- Virtue Ethics doesn't
guarantee happiness
but is often a part of
achieving it.
- Founder of Oxfam, believed in
improving the world for others.
- Differences between Foot and Aristotle
- Foot: Wisdom is a moral AND intellectual virtue
- Anyone can
achieve
wisdom; it
doesn't rely on
social status,
political power
or intellectual
power.
- Sophron: Moral hero = does good
but not pure intentions and Moral
saint = does good from pure
intentions
- She rejected pride as a virtue.
- Anscombe
- First to again analyse
human qualities as a key
to ethical theory
- Rejected absolutist
approaches as they
require a God.
- Ethical progress
comes from
pursuing human
flourishing
(eudaimonia)
- The use of wealth
- How we
respond to
materialistic
context is
crucial in
developing
virtue.
- Liberality and magnificence are
needed.
- If people and
governments
around the world
adopted these
virtues it would
prevent world
poverty and
suffering.
- Factors
- Must be generous
but not tainted by
meanness or
wastefulness
- Balance extremes and
vices. Human aid can allow
dependence by giving
short-term emergency aid or
create independence by
long-term strategies to help
people survive in the future.
Anmerkungen:
- "give a man a fish and you feed him for a day, teach a man to fish and you feed him for life." - Christian Aid's response to world poverty.
- To allow total dependence would be wasteful
but to ignore poverty would be mean.
- A virtuous person/government would provide immediate short-term aid as well as encouraging independence.
- Evaluation
- Strengths
- Although it is self-focused it's other regarding.
Self-improvement builds a better community.
- The virtuous person is the exemplar so it has guiding principles
- Appeals to feminist thinkers as an alternative to
rules and duties (a male way of approaching life).
Other systems have been devised by men for men.
- Naturalistic
system, not
dependent on
religion.
- Promotes lasting change
- Weaknesses
- Self-centred
- Imprecise and vague, more guidance is required.
- It's contradictory and subjective.
- It's too intellectual for everyone to
understand + Aristotle said we don't all
have the same ability to resist vice.
- Too individualistic
- Too much dependence on the potential goodness of others. It's naïve.
- Exhibits speciesism as it focuses on
humanity as the supreme being (Peter
Singer would take issue with this)
- Comparison with deontological
and teleological systems
- Same
- Idea of duty and
doing the right thing.
- Virtues could be moral absolutes
- Mel Thompson see it as an
extension of Natural Law
- Contextual moral dilemmas like
situation ethics/utilitarianism.
- Different
- Person-centred not rule-centred.
- The virtues are very different
to the rules in other systems.
- Compatibility with religion
- Compatible
- Stresses altruism (a
concern for well-being of
others), like religion does.
- Promotes
responsibility of the
individual to better
themselves.
- Religious thinkers have
developed the theory
e.g. Aquinas
- Incompatible
- No rules could
encourage an
'anything goes'
society, not
consistent with
religion
- Won't appeal to traditional, conservative religious
followers due to liberal and subjective aspects.
- Other ethical systems
might be more attractive
e.g. situation ethics.