Module 6
Module 6
General Concepts:
• Virtue
• Practical Wisdom
• Flourishing
Aristotle
• Classical Philosopher
• REASON is the highest faculty of a person
Virtue Ethics argues that character and a concrete conception of the human good are central to
ethics – which the right question to ask when working out what it means to be ethical is NOT “what
should I do” but “what sort of person should I be?” The emphasis is the importance of moral character
– in particular the possession of some combination of ‘virtues’ including practical wisdom – in
determining the right action, and the proper understanding of right action with reference to concrete
conceptions of the good, or human flourishing… The three central concepts in Virtue Ethics are VIRTUE,
PRACTICAL WISDOM, and FLOURISHING. (Oxford University Press)
In the West, Virtue Ethics’ founding fathers are Plato and Aristotle, and in the East, it can be traced
back to Mencius and Confucius.
Telos
• What is the ULTIMATE PURPOSE of a person?
• Criteria for the Ultimate Telos:
o Final – you can no longer find other purpose above it. (basically highest)
o Self-sufficient – when achieved you no longer have other desires, feeling of contentment
o Attainable – not impossible to reach
• The highest purpose of a man is to achieve EUDAIMONIA
Eudaimonia
• HUMAN FLOURISHING, HAPPINESS
• Highest purpose and highest good
• Not an emotion
• Not Nirvana
• Can be achieved by fulfilling one’s ERGON
• EUDAIMONISTIC LIFE – life that is full of happiness as a result of being able to achieved
something
Ergon
• What is the FUNTION of a person?
• FUNTCTION: an activity of reason
• A GOOD PERSON:
o Performs his rational activity well
o In an excellent way (arete)
VIRTUE (Arete)
A virtue is an excellent trait of character. It is a disposition, well entrenched in its possessor. This is
something that goes all the way down, unlike a habit such as being a tea-drinker. It goes all the way
down to how you notice, expect, value, feel, desire, choose, act, and react in certain ways. To possess
a virtue is to be a person whose mindset is to wholeheartedly accept a distinctive range of
consideration as reasons for action.
For example, an honest person cannot be identified simply as one who practices honest dealing and
does not cheat. If such action is done merely because the agent thinks that honesty is the best policy,
he is not an honest person. An honest person cannot be identified simply because he tells the truth
because it is the truth. An honest person’s reasons and choices with respect to honest and dishonest
actions should reflect her views about honesty, truth, and deception – such views should manifest
themselves with respect to other actions and to emotional reactions as well. Valuing honesty means
choosing whenever possible to work with honest people, to have honest friends, to bring up children
to be honest, do disapprove or dislike dishonesty, to despise those who succeed through deception
rather than thinking they are clever.
For the Greeks, virtue is equivalent to excellence. A virtuous person is someone who performs a
distinctive activity of being human well. For Aristotle, moral virtue is a disposition to behave in the right
manner and as a mean between extremes of deficiency and excess. It is a matter of having the
appropriate attitude toward pain and pleasure. Aristotle provided a list of principle virtues with their
corresponding vices. A virtuous person is a morally good, excellent or admirable person who acts and
feels as he should and who exhibits all of the virtues.
Virtue
Deficient (-) Excess (+)
(Mesotes/Mean/Balance)
Cowardice COURAGE Rashness
Stinginess GENEROSITY Extravagance
Sloth AMBITION Greed
Humility MODESTY Pride
Secrecy HONESTY Loquacity
Moroseness GOOD HUMOR Absurdity
Quarrelsomeness FRIENDSHIP Flattery
Self-indulgence TEMPERANCE Insensibility
Apathy COMPOSURE Irritability
Indecisiveness SELF CONTROL Impulsiveness
Virtue
• The appropriate attitude towards pain and pleasure
• The MEAN between two vices (deficiency and excess)
• Intellectual Virtue
o Act of knowing
o Acquired through teaching and learning
o Phronesis (Practical Wisdom)
• Moral Virtue
o The good, the right actions
o Acquired through habit
Points of Consideration
• Religious Pluralism
• What if the if the individual is purely secular?
• Leap of faith requires going beyond the ethical
References:
• Aristotle, ., Ross, W. D., & Brown, L. (2009). The Nicomachean ethics. Oxford: Oxford University
Press.
• Costello, G. (2017). Aristotle’s Phronesis: Seeking philosophical foundations for design science
research. Retrieved from https://www.researchgate.net/publication/318722910Links to an
external site.
• Links to an external site.DeYoung, R. K., McCluskey, C. & Van Dyke, C. (2009). Aquinas’ Ethics:
Metaphysical foundations, moral theory, and theological context. Indiana: University of Notre
Dame Press