If we are to judge the excellence of a human being, — Agustino
Virtue is inner strength - nothing can take it away — Agustino
You certainly seem to be claiming that what 'humans in general' do is by definition the most rational and true expression of their purpose. — Barry Etheridge
Happiness is, after all, nothing but a delusional state which denies reality and in its worst expressions (where it reaches near cultic status) actively seeks to hide reality from us all. It is no more than a permanent state of denial which seems to be a pretty poor thing to be considered the purpose or meaning of life — Barry Etheridge
It is the purpose, whether someone is actually fulfilling it (or is aware it is the purpose, or wants to fulfil it) is a different story.I think your mistake lies in confusing what should (should in the moral sense) be the general purpose behind human actions with what actually is the general purpose behind human actions. — hunterkf5732
Such as?Finally, this isn't entirely true. There are lots of external circumstances which could take away your virtue. — hunterkf5732
Yes, and you would disappear along with the virtue in that case - you would take it with you. It's similar for example to the woman who tries to be chaste until marriage but is raped before she gets married. Does that mean the virtue of chastity was taken away from her? Absolutely not, because virtue has less to do with physical aspects and more to do with her character (what her will is directed towards) which remains the same.Remember that virtue is merely a notion dealt with by a certain portion of our brain. If some external factor, say a car accident, were to damage this part of the brain, our capability of even understanding what virtue is, would disappear along with it. — hunterkf5732
Oh, well I agree that there is no final resting place. I like the metaphor of just learning to fall off of the horse less often. The "horse" is a general sense of well-being and flow. Falling off is trauma. Life-philosophy or wisdom writing helps keep us on the horse and get back on when we fall off. And even this statement (life philosophy's self-consciousness) can contribute. We can think of our worldview and/or our "ego ideal" as software to be judged by its effectiveness.The point I was getting at is that the human psyche's stability during episodes of trauma is primarily held together by hope. Hope for a better future, hope for a happy future. People will delude themselves their entire lives, believing that if they just run a mile a day, or go Paleo, or convert to such-and-such religion, or meditate three times a day, or get organized with their ergonomic crap, that then they will finally be happy. It's never quite accomplished, though. — darthbarracuda
It is the purpose, whether someone is actually fulfilling it (or is aware it is the purpose, or wants to fulfil it) is a different story. — Agustino
Such as? — Agustino
Absolutely not, because virtue has less to do with physical aspects and more to do with her character (what her will is directed towards) which remains the same. — Agustino
The criminal is either mistaken about his purpose, or he thinks that robbing a bank is a means to achieve it. Purpose in my framework, which is Aristotelian, is objective. Whether X or Y knows their purpose is a different story. Purpose is not that which they choose and act based on.Aaaand you didn't answer my bank robber example. — hunterkf5732
Yes background plays a role in moral development. The thief's son is still to blame for the wrongs that he does, but this is to a smaller extent due to his unfortunate background influence. This doesn't change the fact that he has control over his character - if he wanted to, he could change. The only thing is he doesn't want to.You seem to be overlooking the fact that character is formed by physical aspects in the first place. For an example, someone born in a well to do, educated family would quickly acquire this ''character'' you expect, owing to the influence he receives via these external factors of education,family traditions,etc.
On the other hand, someone who happened to be unlucky enough to be born the son of a thief may acquire a contrary form of character via the external, physical aspects of watching and learning what his dad does. Would you really then blame the thief's son for not having the ''character'' you expect? — hunterkf5732
Motive.What is the term in your ''framework'' then, that represents what people choose and act based on?
Say this term is "X''.
Then here's my OP question rephrased in your terminology: What is the X which most people have in their life? — hunterkf5732
One of the words I have learned on philosophy forums is 'Eudaimonia' (also a word I can never spell without looking it up) but is said to denote 'human flourishing' and to be associated with the virtue ethics associated with Aristotle. And I think it's a perfectly worthy aim - why wouldn't it be? I don't think it amounts to going everywhere with a fixed grin, but living in such a way that your well-being is optimised. You know the song - like a room without a roof. — Wayfarer
“And this is one of the most crucial definitions for the whole of Christianity; that the opposite of sin is not virtue but faith.” — Søren Kierkegaard
It's simply for each person to decide for themselves, should they be interested in it.In a nutshell: What, if any, is the purpose/goal a human would strive towards, in living his/her life? — hunterkf5732
I think Kierkegaard was a bit wrong on this. Faith without virtue is not faith. One cannot claim to have faith while cheating on their wife for example, regardless of how much they profess to be praying to God and loving God, etc.To put a demand on myself for a responsibility for the Other. Ethics as first philosophy. However, I'm not sure if this has to do with accumulating virute or anything. Generally a forgetting of one's self as the arbitrator of the just is something I attempt to keep in mind. — Marty
You mean something less common than some combination of those things, yet nevertheless relatively common?Could you now find some common goal that lies behind the things you name? — hunterkf5732
My own answer to the above question would simply be happiness.
Happiness here covers a broad variety of emotions and mental states including all sorts of satisfactory, comfortable feelings from peacefulness to orgasms. — hunterkf5732
On the contrary, I find the Greek concept just as open to the same criticisms. Being content with the way things are 'meant to be' and being the person we are 'meant to be' is every bit as much a life of denial as happy, clappy ignorance of all that assails us. — Barry Ethridge
This just underlines how happiness lies at the root of our actions. What do you think? — hunterkf5732
Yes, there's happiness associated with both higher pleasures and lower pleasures but John Stuart Mill recommended a preference for the former that wasn't based on happiness. Quite odd, if you ask me. — TheMadFool
This is a recognition that neither happiness nor pleasure is accurately reducible to a linear hierarchy of value. — Possibility
This is a recognition that neither happiness nor pleasure is accurately reducible to a linear hierarchy of value.
— Possibility
Do you mean the pleasure of having sex is the same as the pleasure of saving a person's life and if given a choice between them, you'd not have a preference? — TheMadFool
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