Title: Our search for Happiness
1Our search for Happiness
- Some re-runs, new folks and virtues
2Plato (427-347BC)
- Plato He is all about the City State (His work
The Republic) - Cant find The Good, look for the good in things
- Closest to The Good..contemplation
- A philosopher would make the best king
- Those against him The Sophists is no truth
(Callicles a sophist)
3Aristotle (Him again? Yep.)
- 1. The GoodGod
- 2. God plants good in all things
- 3. Everything has purpose
- 4. We should act virtuously
- 5. Live middle way
- 6. Our purpose is to act reasonably and
rationally - 7. Ethics comes from following above purpose
- 8. HappinessEthical life
4Thomas Aquinas
- Borrowed much of his thoughts from Aristotle,
someone he called THE PHILOSOPHER. - Natural Law
- Wrote Summa Theologica and Summa Gentiles
- At the core of a person is a desire for the good
- People live the good life by using their
intelligence - Wrote much and spoke much of the Cardinal Virtues
and Theological virtuesmore to come on this..
5Immanuel Kant (Manny to his friends)
It is all about duty Goodonly thing good in
itself, a good will Only good if provides no
personal gain Not moral act if you enjoy
doing it Reason dictates what is good
Remember Categorical Imperative
6Emmanuel Levinas (Manny to his friends)
Truthfully, nobody has ever called me Manny.
7So, for review, or if you have not figured it out
yetThree ways to pursue the good.
- Teleological
- Deontological
- Impact of the Gospels
8Cardinal Virtues
- The cardinal virtues are the four principal moral
virtues. The English word cardinal comes from the
Latin word cardo, which means "hinge." They are
called Cardinal because all other virtues hinge
on them. They are Prudence, Temperance,
Fortitude and Justice. - Plato first discussed the Cardinal virtues (he
did so in his great work, The Republic).
Aristotle then wrote about them and then Aquinas
expanded on them (as he did about much of
Aristotles thoughtsremember, he was a big fan
of Aristotle). http//catholicism.about.com/od/bel
iefsteachings/tp/Cardinal_Virtues.htm
9Prudence
Dear Prudence
- St. Thomas Aquinas ranked prudence as the first
cardinal virtue, because it is concerned with the
intellect. Aristotle defined prudence as recta
ratio agibilium, "right reason applied to
practice." It is the virtue that allows us to
judge correctly what is right and what is wrong
in any given situation. When we mistake the evil
for the good, we are not exercising prudencein
fact, we are showing our lack of it. - Because it is so easy to fall into error,
prudence requires us to seek the counsel of
others, particularly those we know to be sound
judges of morality. Disregarding the advice or
warnings of others whose judgment does not
coincide with ours is a sign of imprudence. - http//catholicism.about.com/od/beliefsteachings
/tp/Cardinal_Virtues.htm
10Justice
- How to act well in relation to others
- Justice, according to Saint Thomas, is the second
cardinal virtue, because it is concerned with the
will. As Fr. John A. Hardon notes in his Modern
Catholic Dictionary, it is "the constant and
permanent determination to give everyone his or
her rightful due." We say that "justice is
blind," because it should not matter what we
think of a particular person. If we owe him a
debt, we must repay exactly what we owe. - Justice is connected to the idea of rights. While
we often use justice in a negative sense ("He got
what he deserved"), justice in its proper sense
is positive. Injustice occurs when we as
individuals or by law deprive someone of that
which he is owed. Legal rights can never outweigh
natural ones. http//catholicism.about.com/od/beli
efsteachings/tp/Cardinal_Virtues.htm
11Fortitude
- The third cardinal virtue, according to St.
Thomas Aquinas, is fortitude. While this virtue
is commonly called courage, it is different from
what much of what we think of as courage today.
Fortitude allows us to overcome fear and to
remain steady in our will in the face of
obstacles, but it is always reasoned and
reasonable the person exercising fortitude does
not seek danger for danger's sake. Prudence and
justice are the virtues through which we decide
what needs to be done fortitude gives us the
strength to do it. http//catholicism.about.com/od
/beliefsteachings/tp/Cardinal_Virtues.htm
12Temperance
- Temperance, Saint Thomas declared, is the fourth
and final cardinal virtue. While fortitude is
concerned with the restraint of fear so that we
can act, temperance is the restraint of our
desires or passions. Food, drink, and sex are all
necessary for our survival, individually and as a
species yet a disordered desire for any of these
goods can have disastrous consequences, physical
and moral. Temperance is the virtue that attempts
to keep us from excess, and, as such, requires
the balancing of legitimate goods against our
inordinate desire for them. Our legitimate use of
such goods may be different at different times
temperance is the "golden mean" that helps us
determine how far we can act on our desires. - http//catholicism.about.com/od/beliefsteachings/t
p/Cardinal_Virtues.htm
13For Aquinas
- Abstinence humanizes our desire for food
- Sobriety humanizes the pleasure of drinking
- Chastity humanizes our desire for sexual
pleasure - Chastity means the integration of sexuality
within the person. It includes an apprenticeship
in self-mastery From CCC 2395 - Chastity is the virtue which excludes or
moderates the indulgence of the sexual appetite.
It is a form of the virtue of temperance, which
controls according to right reason the desire for
and use of those things which afford the greatest
sensual pleasures. http//www.newadvent.org/cathen
/03637d.htm
14Now it is time for a movie..
- Cry Freedom.starring.
- Kevin Kline and Denzel Washington
15Now it is time for a musical break.by this guy.
16Solicitude
- Anxious concern for another
- The Good Life Needs Just Institutions
- The good life goes beyond individualsit
includes the social structure of institutionsWe
see this in such institutions as the family, the
state, health care, churches, and the market
economy. Ethics is very much interested in the
way that these institutions promote and stabilize
our search for the good.