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ACHIEVING EUDAIMONIA To achieve '' Eudaimonia '' one must live by what can be considered virtues such as Justice , Wisdom , Courage , Prudence and so forth. A virtue ethicist would argue that this is what all humans would rationally choose to live by. To help us achieve eudaimonia we must practice to be virtuous. This is why, for many virtue ethicists, such as Aristotle, ''eudaimon'' should only refer to older people as only they have enough practical experience of life. A person who is aware of the right virtues to live by but chooses not to do so suffers from '' Akrasia '' or 'weakness of the will' according to Aristotle. CRITICISMS OF VIRTUE ETHICS As with all other schools of ethical theory, there are objections to virtue ethics. Some claim a problem with the theory is the difficulty of establishing the nature of the virtues. Different people, cultures and societies often have vastly different opinions on what constitutes a virtue. For example, many would have once considered a virtuous woman to be quiet, servile, and industrious. This conception of female virtue no longer holds true in many modern societies (see also Cultural Relativism ). Proponents of virtue ethics sometimes respond to this objection by arguing that a central feature of a virtue is its ''universal applicability''. In other words, any character trait defined as a virtue must reasonably be universally regarded as a virtue for all sentient beings. According to this view, it is inconsistent to claim for example servility as a female virtue, while at the same time not proposing it as a male one. Another objection to virtue ethics is that the school seems to view all kinds of actions, even seemingly reprehensible ones such as murder, as more or less permissible. This is a fact, and a central feature of virtue ethics. Virtue ethics does not focus on what ''sorts of actions'' are morally permitted and which ones are not, but rather on what sort of qualities someone ought to foster in order to become a good person. In other words, while virtue ethics may not condemn, for example, murder as an inherently immoral or impermissible sort of action, it may argue that someone who commits a murder is severely lacking in several important virtues, such as Compassion and Fairness . Still, antagonists of the theory often object that this particular feature of the theory makes virtue ethics useless as a universal norm of acceptable conduct suitable as a base for Legislation . Some virtue theorists concede to this point, but respond by opposing the very notion of legitimate legislative Authority instead, effectively advocating some form of Anarchism as the political ideal. Others argue that it is possible to base a juridical system on the moral notion of virtues rather than rules. VIRTUE ETHICS CONTRASTED WITH OTHER ETHICAL SYSTEMS The methods of virtue ethics are in contrast to the dominant methods in ethical philosophy, which focus on Actions . For example, both Kantian and Utilitarian systems try to provide guiding principles for actions that allow a person to decide how to behave in any given situation. Virtue ethics, by contrast, focuses on what makes a good person, rather than what makes a good action. As such it is often associated with a Teleological ethical system - one that seeks to define the proper ''telos'' (goal or end) of the human person. HISTORICAL ORIGINS Like much of the Western tradition, virtue ethics seems to have originated in ancient Greek philosophy. Discussion of what were known as the Four Cardinal Virtues - Prudence , Justice , Fortitude and Temperance - can be found in Plato 's '' Symposium ''. The virtues also figure prominently in Aristotle's moral theory (see below). The Greek idea of the virtues was later incorporated into Christian moral theology. During the scholastic period, the most comprehensive consideration of the virtues from a theological perspective was provided by St. Thomas Aquinas in his '' Summa Theologiae '' and his ''Commentaries on the Nicomachean Ethics''. The idea of virtue also plays a prominent role in the moral philosophy of David Hume . ARISTOTLE'S THEORY OF THE VIRTUES In the '' Nicomachean Ethics '', Aristotle categorized the virtues as moral and Intellectual . Aristotle identified nine intellectual virtues, the most important of which were ''sophia'' (theoretical wisdom) and ''phronesis'' (practical wisdom). The moral virtues included prudence, justice, fortitude, and temperance. Aristotle argued that each of the moral virtues was a mean (see Golden Mean ) between two corresponding vices. For example, the virtue of courage is a mean between the two vices of Cowardice and Foolhardiness . Where cowardice is the disposition to act more fearfully than the situation deserves, and foolhardiness is the disposition to show too little fear for the situation, courage is the mean between the two: the disposition to show the amount of fear appropriate to the situation. VIRTUE ETHICS OUTSIDE THE WESTERN TRADITION Non-Western moral and religious philosophies, such as Confucianism , also incorporate ideas that may appear similar to those developed by the ancient Greeks. Like ancient Greek ethics, Chinese ethical thought makes an explicit connection between virtue and Statecraft . However, where the Greeks focused on the interior orientation of the soul, Confucianism's definition of virtue emphasizes interpersonal relations. CONTEMPORARY VIRTUE ETHICS Although some Enlightenment philosophers (e.g. Hume ) continued to emphasize the virtues, with the ascendancy of Utilitarianism and Deontology , virtue ethics moved to the margins of Western philosophy. The contemporary revival of virtue ethics is frequently traced to the philosopher G. E. M. Anscombe 's 1958 essay, ''Modern Moral Philosophy'' and to Philippa Foot , who published a collection of essays in 1978 entitled ''Virtues and Vices.'' Since the 1980s, in works like ''After Virtue'' and ''Three Rival Versions of Moral Enquiry'', philosopher Alasdair MacIntyre has made an effort to reconstruct a virtue-based ethics in dialogue with the problems of modern and Postmodern thought. Following MacIntyre, Stanley Hauerwas , American Methodist theologian, has also found the language of virtue quite helpful in his own project. More recently, Rosalind Hursthouse has published ''On Virtue Ethics'' and Roger Crisp and Michael Slote have edited a collection of important essays titled ''Virtue Ethics''. SEE ALSO FURTHER READING EXTERNAL LINKS
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