Aristotle's Theory Of Virtue Ethics

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Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics discusses virtues and their importance in life. He explains what it takes for a person to develop the right traits to be “good”. Aristotle wrote about this theory of Virtue Ethics in around 340 BC (Aristotle). However, after the renaissance period this way of thinking was soon forgotten as common theories became about the acts rather than the person itself. As new religions arose and society began to follow laws and moral codes, people started to neglect Aristotle 's way of examining life (Rachel 's, 2014, page 157). As people began to think differently, their theories changed as well. Now modern theories rely more on the acts themselves and Aristotle’s theory of Virtue Ethics is questioned as a valid theory because it does exactly the opposite. Critics of Virtue Ethics state that it does not seem to give straight answers to our everyday problems because it does not have set rules. However, with insight from people like James Rachels and Rosalind Hursthouse, it is obvious that Aristotle developed …show more content…

Thinking about the virtuous agent will help us apply our virtues correctly and come to the best possible decision. Although we may not have the right decision, a virtuous agent will use his experience and knowledge of the virtues to guide us. The virtuous agent will correctly apply the virtues and pick actions better than we can. For example take kindness, an average person might act kindly in a scenario and think they are acting right. It may seem like kindness, but a virtuous agent might foresee future problems and advise us not to act that way. Our understanding of the virtues is often flawed. Virtuous agents have insight into what virtue really asks as opposed to what we think it asks. It takes an expert to apply the skills correctly, which is why Virtue Ethics is a good theory to use. You have to have the character skills to

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