I am a consequentialist, specifically a hedonic prioritarian [...] I see only the perfect as the good. — darthbarracuda
I was never convinced that utilitarianism could provide a comprehensive basis for moral philosophy, although elements of it are worthy of incorporation into more satisfying and comprehensive conceptions — John
and no argument can rule out the possibility that there are other goods which we can affirm that have nothing to do with our lives. — The Great Whatever
Indeed, I have wondered about this myself. What if there is a non-agential good that really ought to be cultivated? — darthbarracuda
Most of the time, it comes down to intuition/feeling/compassion; conditional on the information given and my personal understanding of the situation on a case to case basis. — OglopTo
I'm not a sufficientarian, though, because this leads right into a repugnant conclusion. — darthbarracuda
Instead, I see only the perfect as the good. — darthbarracuda
See here. — darthbarracuda
If it isn't perfect, it's not worth it. — darthbarracuda
The flaw I see in virtue ethics, is that it is, or maybe just is usually selfish. It's amazing that none of the ancient virtue ethicists thought "isn't slavery wrong?" — anonymous66
What name would you give that vice? Edit: Perhaps justice is the virtue that is at issue? Hard to see one man owning another as being fair or just.Under virtue ethics, you can ask what kind of person would keep a slave, and you can say that keeping slaves is indicative of vice. — Sapientia
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