There it would be relevant to point out that, no, in some senses of the word 'morality' we are thinking of rules or happiness as evidenced by those brain regions being active when engaged in a 'moral' decisions in that sense. — Isaac
You will doubtless agree that there is a difference between doing something because it makes you happy and doing it because it is the right things to do.
That is, the happiness is incidental to the morality of the act... no? — Banno
Divine command theory is a moral systems, so it must be included in your set {all moral systems}, thus your definition of 'flourishing' must included the type of flourishing envisioned in divine command theory (otherwise your first statement is false). — Isaac
I find myself moving away from duty and happiness, towards virtue. It cuts out so much philosophical crap. That is also a move away from "the mental capacity to calculate the correct 'caring-for-others' action to take". — Banno
the injunction to be virtuous. — Janus
I think causing unnecessary suffering is not in the best interests of human flourishing, but I am quite comfortable with causing justifiable harm to those who are responsible for actions which are destructive to the project of human flourishing. Otherwise there would be no such thing as a just war, or killing in self-defense, or locking up serial rapists, and so on. — Thomas Quine
Muddled. Virtue ethics is about growth, becoming; encouraging courage, temperance, liberality, generosity, patience, kindness. — Banno
Muddled. Virtue ethics is about growth, becoming; encouraging courage, temperance, liberality, generosity, patience, kindness. — Banno
Indeed. You were expecting it to be easy? — Banno
In any case, since you want everyone dead, what is it to you? The dead cannot act virtuously; even less, those who never exist. — Banno
No applied ethics is when ethics is tested, in a way. But, I am just saying virtues in themselves mean very little, and what ends up happening is a hierarchy which then actually leads to a "rule", the very kind it seems which you are against. One person's courage is another's foolhardiness. But even more complicated is that one can be courageous yet by doing so, be intemperate or unkind, or cause pain to others, where does that fit in? Maybe causing the harm to others, is only the perception of the other person who thinks this to be unkind, but is not. Maybe they are not judging it correctly, etc. etc. and on it goes. — schopenhauer1
Yep, it's problematic. — Banno
And better to be, to choose, to grow, than never to have been. — Banno
To say that virtue ethics is the right model for moral thought and action is the same as to say that we should be virtuous, no? — Janus
I don't see that as objectively true statement. — schopenhauer1
Maybe, but I didn't say virtue ethics was the 'right' model, and I don't think Banno did either. Not with 'right' being used in a normative sense. — Isaac
We're trying to be like Aragorn. — Isaac
These are questions too complex to be solved algorithmically — Isaac
Maybe, but I didn't say virtue ethics was the 'right' model, and I don't think Banno did either. Not with 'right' being used in a normative sense. — Isaac
"Best model" then or "preferable model"? — Janus
Yes, but the question then is 'what is it about the way Aragorn is that makes you want to be like him?". It's no good just saying "His being virtuous", because that perhaps begs the question, but it certainly tells us nothing. — Janus
I'm looking at morality as consisting in caring for others; which just is to say to care about their flourishing. — Janus
The common model. — Isaac
Are you suggesting the majority of people think in terms of virtue? — Janus
If so then how do think they represent virtue to themselves? Are you suggesting that most people just visualize Aragorn or some other persona they have adopted as a hero, or something like that? I guess, if they have never reflected on the question then they must have idea of, image of, or feeling for what virtue is. — Janus
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