2. Life of Aristotle
Student of Plato (another Greek philosopher)
Interested in learning about and reflecting on
the natural sciences (botany, physics, biology,
astronomy, psychology)
Established his own school, called Lyceum
Was a personal tutor for Alexander (who later
conquered much of the world)
3. Virtue Ethics:
Becoming a Virtuous Person
Ethics must be concrete and practical
Virtue ethics focuses on the moral quality of
individuals, or how to be a good person
Aristotle (384 – 322 B.C.E.): in order to
become a virtuous person one must develop a
virtuous character.
4. Becoming a Virtuous Person
A virtuous person is a happy person.
What counts is the experience of particulars
and not just the knowledge of what is
universally true.
There is no single science of ‘good’
We find multitude of goods: good medicine,
good generalship, good politics
Each good has its own end, and each must be
judged in terms of the good it aims at.
5. Becoming a Virtuous Person
In ethics, it’s not just the theoretical that
counts, but also the practical:
“The ultimate purpose in studying ethics is not
as it is in other inquiries, the attainment of
theoretical knowledge; we are not conducting
this inquiry in order to know what virtue is, but
in order to become good, else there would be
no advantage in studying it.” (Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics, Bk, 2, Ch
2)
6. What is it to ‘become good’?
When we do something, we always have some
end in view
This end is always good (no one strives for
something they consider bad)
We often do something for the sake of another
But this can’t go on forever. What we want is to
find some end, which we value for its own sake.
If we find that final end, we need to keep that
before our eyes, as a target, so it would guide
our lives.
7. What is it to ‘become good’?
What is this final end, which is our target?
Aristotle’s term is ‘eudaemonia’
Happiness
Well-being
Flourishing
8. What is happiness?
Everyone wants to be happy. This is the end,
our final goal. All other things we do for
something else’s sake. We seek only
happiness for its own sake.
But what is happiness?
Pleasure? - not just that
Amusement? – not that
Fame and Honor? – not that either
9. Function (Telos) of Human Beings
The function of a flute player is to play flute and we
judge her to be good in terms of that.
What is the function of human beings?
It is the ACTIVITY OF SOUL in
ACCORDANCE WITH REASON or AT LEAST
NOT WITHOUT REASON.
10. Function of Human Beings
The soul is the essence of a living human being
Humans are being human when are acting in
human ways.
We have a rational soul so our function is to live
accordingly: to live according to our rational
souls
But an excellent human life is NOT purely an
intellectual pursuit. We need to develop both
intellectual virtues and moral virtues – that
pertain to our social and physical aspects.
11. Happiness and Virtues
Happiness is not possible without virtues
Virtue = ARETE (in Greek)
Some virtues that are necessary for happiness:
Wisdom
Pleasure (because the lives of those who live
rationally with excellence are pleasurable)
We also need a certain amount of good fortune
(happiness is not entirely in yourcontrol)
12. Happy Life
A happy life is a life of activity
Happiness is not something that
happens to you. It’s not passive.
It’s the activity of your soul in
accordance with excellence.
13. Becoming a Virtuous Person
To be moral requires that you know what you are doing,
deliberately choose to do it, and do it as an example of a
settled and immutable moral state.
** Finding the proper balance between two extremes.
Excess: having too much of something.
Deficiency: having too little of something.
Not mediocrity, but harmony and balance.
Virtue is to seek the mean, or middle ground, between
vices.
vice vice
VIRTUE
15. Learned Virtues
For Aristotle, virtue is something that is
practiced and thereby learned—it is a habit
(he xis).
This has clear implications for moral
education, for Aristotle obviously thinks that
you can teach people to be virtuous.
16. Think about it:
What do you think is the function
(telos) of a human being?
What is the distinctive quality of being
human?
How does pleasure come into a good
life?
Can you teach people to be virtuous?
Is it true that the ability to reason is
unique to humans?
Can wicked people still act
reasonably by avoiding extremes?