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Aristotle’s Ethics

Aristotle’s Ethics

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Aristotle’s Ethics. Ancient Athens. Aristotle. Aristotle: Goods. Instrumental goods: desired for the sake of something else Intrinsic goods: desired for their own sake. Happiness. One thing is always desired for its own sake, never for the sake of something else: happiness. Happiness. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Aristotle’s Ethics

Aristotle’s Ethics

Page 2: Aristotle’s Ethics

Ancient Athens

Page 3: Aristotle’s Ethics

Aristotle

Page 4: Aristotle’s Ethics

Aristotle: Goods

• Instrumental goods: desired for the sake of something else

• Intrinsic goods: desired for their own sake

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Happiness

• One thing is always desired for its own sake, never for the sake of something else: happiness

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Happiness

• One thing is always desired for its own sake, never for the sake of something else: happiness

• Happiness (eudaimonia) = living well = flourishing

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Happiness

• One thing is always desired for its own sake, never for the sake of something else: happiness

• Happiness (eudaimonia) = living well = flourishing

• What does that require? Prosperity and luck, yes, but more

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Living well

• What is it to live well?

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Living well

• What is it to live well?• Analogies:– A good knife cuts well– A good eye sees well– A good teacher teaches well

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Living well

• What is it to live well?• Analogies:– A good knife cuts well– A good eye sees well– A good teacher teaches well

• A good person _____s well

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Function

• A thing’s function stems from what is special about it: what distinguishes it from other things– Knives cut: sharpness —> cutting– Eyes see: ability to see —> seeing– Teachers teach: ability to teach —> teaching

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Our Function

• What is the function of a human being?

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Our Function

• What is the function of a human being?

• What is special about people?

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Our Function

• What is the function of a human being?

• What is special about people?

• We act according to rational plans

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Virtue

• Our function is rational activity

• A good person succeeds at rational activity

• Virtue = excellence• A virtuous person excels

at rational activity

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Two Kinds of Virtue

• Virtue = rational activity• Excellence in rationality: intellectual virtue• Excellence in activity: moral virtue

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Becoming virtuous

• Intellectual virtue can be taught

• Moral virtue can’t be• It requires developing

habits• We become good by

doing good things

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Right and wrong

• An act is right if it is something a virtuous person would tend to do

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Circular?

• Moderns: A virtuous person is one who tends to do the right thing.

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Circular?

• Moderns: A virtuous person is one who tends to do the right thing.

• Aristotle: That’s not enough. A virtuous person tends to do the right thing as virtuous people do them.

• A good person consistently does the right thing at the right time, in the right way, and for the right reason.

• Virtuous people do the right thing for the right reason: because it’s the right thing to do.

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Virtue as a Mean

• Virtues are means between extremes• Virtues constrain desires• But we may constrain too little or too much

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Virtues and Vices

Drive Too little Just right Too muchFear cowardly courageous rashPleasure self-indulgent self-controlled insensitiveMaterial goods stingy generous extravagantSelf-esteem vain high-minded small-mindedAnger short-tempered gentle apatheticSociability obsequious friendly grouchyBoasting boastful truthful self-deprecatingHumor clownish witty boringDrive for honor ambitious ? unambitiousSpending grudging magnificent vulgar

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Virtue as a Mean

• We must give in to desire in the right circumstances, in the right way, for the right reason, etc.

• Practical wisdom—the ability to draw the right distinctions and tell right from wrong—allows us to find the mean

• There’s no rule for doing this• You must learn to see what is right

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Can one be too moral?

• It’s possible to be “too generous” (extravagant), “too courageous” (rash), “too witty” (clownish), etc.

• Is it possible to be too moral?

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Too narrow?(Falsenegatives)

Toobroad?(Falsepositives)

Aristotle’s Theory

• Right

Virtuous people would tend to do it