2B Natural Law: the role of virtues and goods in supporting moral behaviour Flashcards
According to Aquinas, how can correct reasoning be developed?
• Through the cultivation of virtues
What are the three theological/virtues? What did Aquinas refer to them as?
- Faith, Hope, Love
* “articles of faith”
Why are the three theological virtues also known as the ‘three revealed virtues’?
• They are ‘revealed’ in the Bible
What is the most important of the three theological/revealed virtues? What Bible passage tells us this? Give the quote.
- Love
- 1 Corinthians 13:13
- “And now these three remain: faith, hope and love. But the greatest of these is love.”
What is important about the theological virtues?
- They are the superlative virtues that define and direct all other virtues
- They are aspirational, in that they cannot be fully achieved in this world, being far above the capacity of a human being ∴ should be the standard to aim for
What is the beatific vision?
- The final and absolute end: the state of perfect happiness through supernatural union w/ G.
- Human beings “attain their last end by knowing and loving God.”
Elaborate on the theological virtue of Faith.
- “an act of intellect which assents to the divine truth at the command of the will, moved by God’s grace”
- Reflects total outpouring and deference to the divine
Elaborate on the theological virtue of Hope.
- The constant and consistent trust in achieving the beatific vision
- A spiritual energy that drives a person
- Underlying virtue that supports active participation in other non-theological, moral virtues
Elaborate on the theological virtue of Love (agape, charity).
- Actively directs all other virtues towards God
- Has healing properties as it restores our ‘fallen’ nature
- Incorporates the ‘gift’ of wisdom, a significant virtue for Aristotle
- Does not refer to sexual, empathetic or affectionate (which were other Greek words translated as ‘love’)
Define cardinal virtues.
• The natural framework for moral behaviour to become more G-like
List the four cardinal virtues.
1) Prudence
2) Temperance
3) Fortitude
4) Justice
Elaborate on the cardinal virtue of prudence.
- Ability to make sound judgements in reasoning
- It is the application of “wisdom concerning human affairs”
- 3 steps: counsel, judgement, command - the art of casuistry
- Related to other virtues that might depend on it, e.g. memory, intelligence, docility
Elaborate on the cardinal virtue of temperance.
- Similar to Aristole’s mean
- Moderation, sobriety, restraint, balance
- Encompasses the virtues of humility, meekness, generosity, studiousness
Elaborate on the cardinal virtue of fortitude.
- Courage in the face of adversity
- Incorporates discipline, patience, endurance
- A fortitudinous person will not be broken by stress or sorrow
- Encourages nobility of character
Elaborate on the cardinal virtue of justice.
- Specfically focuses on others and how our actions are governed
- Covers the law in a general and individual sense
- Recognises individual needs, relative to circumstances e.g. someone in poverty requires more assistance from justice than a wealthy person
- One is expected to make a stand when one sees acts of injustice