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Transcript
VIRTUE ETHICS
The Cultivation of Character
From Duty to Virtue
• Kant’s examples: what ARE our “duties”?
• Strict, “perfect,” negative duties (e.g., do not kill,
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harm, lie, cheat, steal)
These are “duties of Justice”
Vague, “imperfect,” positive duties (develop
yourself, help others)
Duties of “Virtue” – but what IS this?
Utilitarianism requires virtuous character (in what
sense?)
Class Exercise: Virtues of
Professions
• “Excellence” (arete, virtue) is defined with respect
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to a specific practice
Some traits show up on several lists
Some traits are recognizably moral traits
Q: Are there excellences pertaining to the
“practice” of being a human being?
Aristotle’s problem: what are the traits of
character that make for a full and flourishing
human life (happiness, eudaimonia)
Character and Excellence
(arete)
Heretofore we have discussed rational decision
theory; morality seems to be procedural
• Categorical Imperative procedure
• Utilitarian “Greatest Happiness” calculus
But is Morality, properly understood, something
more than a set of decision procedures???
What Else might be Involved?
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Perhaps morality is not just about making the right
choice
doing the “right thing” (duty)
getting the right result (greatest good for the
greatest number)
Perhaps morality is also about building character
what kind of person do I wish to become?
“what kind of a human being ARE you?”
Central Questions about
Character or Virtue Ethics
• what are the “right habits” (I.e., the ones
that lead to human flourishing, happiness)?
• how are they cultivated?
• can they be taught?
• or must they be acquired over time?
Aristotle’s Virtue Ethics
virtues or excellences of character include:
• moral virtues (like honesty, fairness or
justice)
• prudential virtues (like temperance,
modesty)
• intellectual virtues (like wisdom)
• some that are hard to classify (like courage)
Some General Observations
about Aristotelian Virtues
• virtues, including moral virtues, are not so much
taught as learned by example, observation,
practice
• Cultivating these traits is compared to practicing
archery or marksmanship
• Hitting the “bull’s eye” takes time, practice,
patience
• Demonstrating the appropriate behavior at the
“right” time, “right” place, to the “right” degree
How do we Define Virtue?
• a virtue is often (but not always) a “mean”
between two extremes, an excess and a defect:
• example of courage – sometimes the deficiency is
more to be avoided than the excess
• there do not seem to be general rules or principles,
and certainly no algorithms or formulae for virtue
Summary of Virtue Theory
• Human happiness, flourishing, stem from
cultivation of proper virtues
• This is an ongoing, life-long task
• Social practice: experienced veterans
provide “mentorship” and constraints (laws)
• Friendship, and the role (and regulation) of
emotions are included in the mix
Limitations of the Theory
• Some vices (murder, adultery) don’t have a
“mean” or a virtue-correlate
• Some people are just not “teachable,” they
cannot hope to take on even a “tincture” of
virtue
• Law and legal institutions limit their
behavior, and also help habituate the
teachable (especially the young)
Criticisms of Virtue Theory
• Indeterminate, vague, imprecise
• Possessing the requisite virtues does not
guarantee how one will act in a given
situation
• Indeed, virtue theory does not provide the
specific kind of behavioral guidance that
modern procedural theories offer