Susan Wolf Flashcards
1
Q
What is a rational saint?
A
People with non-moral/selfish desires, but don’t act on them because of their strong sense of duty
2
Q
What is a loving saint?
A
Someone whose own well-being is maximized by the maximization of other’s well-being, and is always striving to do the right thing
3
Q
What does Wolf think of ration & loving saints?
A
She believes moral ideas set up like Utilitarianism and Deontology are unattractive ideals
4
Q
What moral ideal do rational saints follow?
A
Deontology (Kant)
5
Q
What moral ideal do loving saints follow?
A
Utilitarianism (Mill)
6
Q
What are Susan Wolf’s arguments against moral sainthood?
A
- Moral virtues crowd our non-moral virtues
- They’re boring
- Motivating structure is alienating
7
Q
How do Susan Wolf’s arguments apply to moral sainthood?
A
- Some non-moral virtues will be completely off the table because they conflict with the moral virtues (Ex/ having a good sense of humor means you need to have a little bit of immorality)
- A Moral Saint has to be very, very nice and not be offensive. They’ll have to be humorless or bland. Nice people are DULL.
- A Moral Saint may have hobbies, passions, commitments, but will have to give them up as soon as they conflict with morality