Week 2: Aristotle Flashcards
ETHICS FOR ARISTOTLE
- How should men best live?
- What is the highest good? –> Eudaimonia
THE HIGHEST GOOD
- is self-sufficient
- is desirable for itself
- is not desirable for the sake of some other good
- all other goods are desirable for its sake
TELOS
The highest good is the ultimate
purpose, or end.
Telos: goal, end, purpose, function
Goodness resides in the fulfilment of one’s telos.
TELOS OF HUMANS
an active life of the element that has a rational principle.
Logos: Speech, structured thought, reason, ratio
PRACTICING VIRTUE
Aristotle’s concept of ethical virtue:
- Ethical virtue is a tendency or disposition induced by habits to have appropriate feelings.
- Childhood exposure to situations requiring appropriate actions and emotions is crucial for its development.
- As autonomy increases, deliberative skills improve, refining emotional responses.
- Virtuous individuals find pleasure in exercising intellectual skills
- Once a decision is made, virtuous individuals do not face internal pressures to act otherwise.
ETHICAL VIRTUES - Two parts of the soul:
- Rational
- Irrational
Two parts of irrational soul: - Completely without reason
- Not without reason
The excellence in the activities of the irrational part of the soul that is not without reason are the ethical virtues.
ARETE
Arete: Excellence, virtue
“excellence displayed in the fulfillment of purpose or function (telos)”.
The meaning of “arete” is not an ethical one.
It changes depending on what it describes.
SUMMING UP: EUDAIMONIA, TELOS, LOGOS, ARETE
The telos, the purpose of humans is an active life with an element of reason (logos).
The eudaimon life, which is the highest good, is a life where we perform our telos with excellence, with arete.
The eudaimon life is one where we perform the activity of reason in the most excellent way.
THE GOLDEN MEAN
- Ethical virtues are golden means between excess and deficiency.
- Just like mastering technical skills, virtues involve finding a balance.
- For example, courage is the midpoint between cowardice and recklessness.
- Determining the mean requires careful consideration and rational decision-making.
ETHICS AND DECISION-MAKING
- Aristotle: no ethical theory can offer a decision procedure
- Virtue theory focuses on understanding virtue, but applying it in specific situations relies on circumstances.
- There are no universal rules for every practical problem due to varying circumstances.
- Virtuous individuals excel in deliberation, using rational inquiry to determine the best course of action in each situation.
- Their expertise makes their perspectives authoritative and sought after in settling disputes and making decisions.