Is Ethics Based on Virtue?
mean
an average. that which falls in the middle. for aristotle, virtuous action always fell within the mean or middle between two extremes
virtue
for the ancient greeks, virtue and excellence were the same word. for aristotle, virtue was found in the mean between too much and too little.
character
global concept referring to the unique combination of needs, desires, emotions, feelings, moods, beliefs, talents, and skills, which together make up who an individual's uniqueness
if a person mastered several virtues, then for aristotle, that person possessed
phronesis
phronesis
practical wisdom which, for aristotle, comes after a number of virtues have been mastered
eudemonia
synonym for joy. for greeks was an overall condition of life which includes many of the emotions but is not simply joy nor is it to be tied to a specific emotion or feeling, like pleasure
virtue ethics tends to focus on
character
According to Aristotle, virtue is to be found in the mean between
deficiency and excess
decision procedure
description of how a person should and does decide or choose according to some clearly articulated rule or principle
aristotle's virtue ethics, as opposed to both Kantianism and Utilitarianism
does not attempt to provide a formula or decision making procedure for evaluation all actions
a core concept for aristotle's virtue ethics is
eudaimonia
for aristotle and the greeks in general, virtue was synonymous with
excellence