aisro1g Notes on Virtue Ethies,
Guest Lecture on Virtue Ethics
Study Questions:
* Why does the virtue ethicist believe that, when scolding a child, it is important to explain why
the act was wrong?
* What does it mean to say that the moral agent "sees and judges with the eyes of experience"?
Why is this important for the virtue ethicist?
Slides
Virtue ethics answer the question “What kind of a person ought one to be?” Virtuous character guides
and constrains practical deliberation, This distinguishes it from other theories, such as Utilitarianism
and Kantian ethics, which focuses on the question "Which acts are right or wrong?"
Virtue ethics is practical in a way other moral theories are not. While rule-guided and duty-guided
theories concentrate on reasoning about the theoretical principles of moral decision-making, the
reasoning of virtue ethics is extrapolated from moral practice.
Virtue ethics is structured in a way which allows it to define the behaviour of the virtuous person. The
situation is perceived within the framework of a character. It is particularly clear in Aristotle's account
of virtue ethics. The moral agent “sees and judges with the eyes of experience.”
Contemporary followers of Aristotle (Aristotelians or neo-Aristotelians) mention the descriptive aspect
of the moral worth of virtues as well. Philippa Foot suggests that when one evaluates a morally
pertinent action, the evaluation includes a descriptive element of a particular behavior. In this manner
the words ‘rude’ or cruel’ can be seen as descriptions. We describe action as cruel in addition to
judging it as cruel.
Virtue ethics recognizes the fact that we are engaged in morally relevant activities long before we are
able to reason about morality.
Virtue ethics includes the early childhood experience in its theoretical considerations.
Virtue ethicists dedicate a large part of their theoretical framework to the shaping of pre-reflective
experience, that is, the cultivation of virtues.
hitpthwww.sf.ca/-etifany/teachingiphil120Wvitue_ethice hil 42152019 Notes on Vue thes
‘Some contemporary virtue theorists emphasize the habitual nature of virtue; others, the moral
character that consists of certain interconnection between virtues; and still others, the moral value
that makes dispositions virtuous.
Nancy Sherman argues for the gradual development of the capacity for virtue, since the reasoning
ability develops with the process of maturation:
“Child is viewed not statically, but as in progress toward full humanity... To lack
deliberative skills at a certain stage does not imply the absence of other cognitive
capacities specific to ethical response. Therefore, virtues, while acquired through
habituation, are not entirely divorced from reason, even at the earliest stages of their
cultivation.” (Sherman)
Virtue may be perceived as good in two distinct senses
a) Virtue can make the person good: it is admirable in its possessor
b) Virtue is good for the person: it is desirable for its possessor.
Neo-Aristotelian virtue ethics: the concept of virtue is Aristotelian, but the neo-Aristotelians disagree
with Aristotle on women, or slaves, etc. The list of virtues neo-Aristotelians accept differs from
Aristotle's. For instance, Aristotle did not include, benevolence or charity on his list, yet the neo-
Aristotelians assume that these virtues are on the list now.
Non-Aristotelian virtue ethics: For instance, agent-based virtue ethics advocated by Michael Slote, He
argued that the principle of impartiality demands an equal consideration for the well being of all the
participants in the moral community, including the agent herself. Thus, the agent's self-interests
become a legitimate component in her decision-making.
Another example: Christine Swanton: Her version of virtue ethics is a pluralist virtue ethics: there are
different sets of virtues that fit different kinds of people. A virtuous action may have the need to
satisfy more than one conception of right in order to be considered virtuous. Her version of virtue
ethics allows for a degree of situational consideration as a threshold concept.
hitpthwww.sf.ca/-etifany/teachingiphil120Wvitue_ethice hil 22