Virtue Ethics
Virtue Ethics
Virtue Ethics
PRESENTATION
03 ARISTOTOLE'S ETHICS
05 THOMAS AQUINAS' ETHICS
04 06
AN EVALUATION OF THE GREEK AN ANALYSIS OF THOMISTICS
PHILOSOPHER'S ETHICAL ETHICS
THEORIES
INTRODUCING
OUR BEST TEAM RICHMON ZEAR CAMPIT
ARISTOTLE BELIEVES
THAT
essence or essential
nature beings, including
humans, lay not at their
cause (beginning) but
at their ends (telos)
.
Happiness and
Virtuesthe ultimate human goal is self-realization.
Virtue as
This flourishing is attained by the habitual
practice of moral and intellectual excellence
and virtues
Habit
The function of human being accordingly,
consists in activities which manifest the best
states of his rational aspect, that is the
virtues
·Moral virtues , for Aristotle is the only
practical road to effective action, the virtuous
person, who has good character, sees truly,
judges rightly and act morally
Virtues and The
Golden Mean
Two Kinds of Virtues
WE TEND TO DO ACTIONS THAT BRING DELIGHTS AND AVOID ACTIONS THAT BRING AGONY.
THE VIRTUOUS PERSON IS BROUGHT UP TO FI D ENJOYMENT IN VIRTUES ACTIONS AND
SORROW IN VICES
Virtues and The
Golden Mean
Phronesis
mean is neither too much nor too little
but also it is relative to us as moral
agents. What constitutes the right
AS ‘PRINCE OF SCHOLASTICS’
THEOLOGIAN (1225-1274)
NATURAL LAW
- “All actions are directed towards ends, Happiness is the final end.”
- Happiness ≠ pleasure, material possessions, honor
- Happiness = activities in accordance with virtue
Virtue – ‘A good habit bearing on activity.’
2 TYPES OF
HABITS
1.Acquired habits – autonomous will of a person.
AUGUSTINE
- Aquinas promotes Aristotles positive depictions
of the world as rational, humane and ordered.