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Virtue ethics is an approach to ethics that emphasizes the character of the moral agent, rather than rules or consequences, as the key element of ethical thinking. This contrasts with consequentialism, which holds that the consequences of a particular act form the basis for any valid moral judgment about that action, and deontology, which derives rightness or wrongness from the character of the act itself rather than the outcomes. The difference between these three approaches to morality tends to lie more in the way moral dilemmas are approached than in the moral conclusions reached. For example, a consequentialist may argue that lying is wrong because of the negative consequences produced by lying — though a consequentialist may allow that certain foreseeable consequences might make lying acceptable. A deontologist might argue that lying is always wrong, regardless of any potential "good" that might come from lying. A virtue ethicist, however, would focus less on lying in any particular instance and instead consider what a decision to tell a lie or not tell a lie said about one's character and moral behavior. Although concern for virtue appears in several philosophical traditions, in the West the roots of the tradition lie in the work of Plato and Aristotle, and even today the tradition’s key concepts derive from ancient Greek philosophy. These concepts include arete (excellence or virtue), phronesis (practical or moral wisdom), and eudaimonia (flourishing). In the West virtue ethics was the prevailing approach to ethical thinking in the ancient and medieval periods. The tradition suffered an eclipse during the early modern period, as Aristotelianism fell out of favour in the West. Virtue theory returned to prominence in Western philosophical thought in the twentieth century, and is today one of the three dominant approaches to normative theories (the other two being deontology and consequentialism). Virtue theory is not actually in conflict with deontology or teleology: those two viewpoints deal with which actions a person should take in any given scenario, whereas virtue theorists simply argue that developing morally desirable virtues for their own sake will help aid moral actions when such decisions need to be made. While virtue ethics was born with Plato and Aristotle, their forms of virtue ethics are by no means the only ones. What virtue ethics refers to, rather, is a collection of normative ethical philosophies that place an emphasis on being rather than doing. Another way to say this is that in virtue ethics, morality stems from the identity and/or character of the individual, rather than being a reflection of the actions (or consequences thereof) of the individual. Today, there is a great amount of debate among various adherents of virtue ethics about what specific virtues are morally praiseworthy. However, the one thing they all agree upon is that morality comes as a result of intrinsic virtues—this is the common link that unites the sometimes disparate normative philosophies into the field known as virtue ethics. From Wikipedia under the
GNU Free Documentation License what is the best way to go about talking of virtue ethics (in philosophy)? Q. I have to write a paper on virtue ethics, but finding it hard to jump in since virtue ethics can not tell you how to be a better person, it only avoids this, I think am mainly just asking for peoples opinion or idea behind there own sense of virtue ethics Asked by gal88 - Fri Apr 3 20:58:01 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments A. Start it with Aristotle and some discussion of Eudaimonia. Good luck! Answered by The Truth Seeker - Sat Apr 4 17:11:17 2009 Is medical Ethics mostly based on virtue ethics or deontology? Q. Is medical Ethics mostly based on virtue ethics or deontology? Asked by grr51 - Sat Jan 30 04:25:49 2010 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments A. Definitely deontology. One of the main points of medical ethics is "do no harm." This fits much better with deontology because it is about doing an action simply because that action is morally right. Answered by howiseverybody - Sat Jan 30 04:32:01 2010 How do you distinguish between morals, morality, ethics, virtue and values?
Q. Is there a slight semantic difference between each? (You don't need to refer to all five of them). To Cato and baldchemist: no disrespect intended at all (I have in the past enjoyed answers given by both of you) but I wonder if you realise that 'semantic' doesn't have the connotations that you both seem to imply. My question is about 'semantics', meaning 'the science of the meaning of words'. I'm not at all suggesting that there is a difference between them so fine as to be meaningless. Were that the case, why would I post the question? Asked by edsawyer - goodnight, Debra - Thu May 25 08:42:27 2006 - - 7 Answers - 0 Comments A. This is pretty deep for 6:43 a.m., MST in Canada. I think some of these are imposed by society and some perhaps are imposed by ourselves. Morals - that's imposed by society. It's more about how I conduct myself according to my society. Ethics - that's imposed by me. Am I honest, true to myself? Virtue - imposed by society - if religious groups or society didn't impose this I would not likely be as virtuous as there would be no-one to state what constitutes virtue and what doesn't. Values - this one is more imposed by me as I decide what is important to me - however, I believe it's strongly guided by what society is doing too. There is a tremendous overlap in all and I think in all cases, we have choices to make. Those who don't… [cont.] Answered by Out of commission - Thu May 25 08:49:53 2006 From Yahoo Answer Search: "Virtue ethics" Man becomes more cosmopolitan in globalized world: Gillespie - Tehran Times
Sun, 13 Jun 2010 19:05:50 GMT+00:00 Tehran Times We moderns, perhaps because we do not value virtue or perhaps because we doubt it can sustain us, rely more on checks and balances. ... Let's not write Jefferson and his American gospel out of history - Minnesota Public Radio
Wed, 23 Jun 2010 10:11:33 GMT+00:00 Minnesota Public Radio Eric Reese, in his book, "American Gospel," boils Jefferson's Christian ethics down to bullet points: Be just; justice comes from virtue , which comes from ... Pathetic state of black fathers - News24
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1252px x 890px | 206.60kB [source page] Virtue Ethics and Professional Roles Justin Oakley and Dean Cocking Professionals it is said have no use for simple lists of virtues and vices The complexities and constraints of professional roles create peculiar moral demands on the people who occupy 13jordan jpg
640px x 800px | 79.20kB [source page] Gus Jordan knows what he s talking about virtue ethics From Yahoo Image Search: "Virtue ethics" Normative Analysis Comprehensive Exam
Mariel Sun, 06 Jun 2010 15:20:00 GM Consider these questions from a utilitarian, a deontological, and a . virtue ethics. point of view. Which do you agree with, and why? Finally, what sort of policy in terms of requiring sacrifice in Bob-type situations, and in terms of ... Religion and the Science of Virtue
John Sanidopoulos Wed, 24 Mar 2010 19:30:00 GM But the new science does not undermine an older conception of morality, namely . virtue ethics. . In fact, . virtue ethics. not only saves appearances, it shows how our capacity for moral reflection and self-examination plays a critical role. ... Virtue Ethics
Mariel Wed, 24 Feb 2010 04:38:00 GM In this paper, Slote provides an overview of . Virtue Ethics. , describes what makes it different from other moral theories, and then provides four types of virtue-ethic theories. . Virtue ethics. is agent-focused, and based on the virtuous ... From Google Blog Search: "Virtue ethics" |





