. Knowing the mean is not the same as acting on it. — Jackson
Virtue is just another name for wisdom. So if you are wise, you are virtuous, and vice versa. — Hello Human
Unless you are a mean sort of fella.
There were three guys from Sparta
Each had a mean sort of phalla.
They cleaned up the town
Their leader went down
In history books as Fella. — god must be atheist
I would take the opposite route from Fooloso4. — Tobias
No, they are interrelated, or mutually reinforcing.Is virtue really just equal to wisdom, or is there a plurality of virtues, each independent from the other(s) ? — Hello Human
Adaptive habits.Or are all the virtues reducible to something that is not equal to wisdom?
... can virtue be taught? Or is it not teachable but the result of practice, or is it neither of these, but men possess it by nature or in some other way?
The Greek term translated as virtue is arete. It means the excellence of a thing. Human excellence is the realization of human potential. Someone who has attained human excellence is wise. — Fooloso4
Someone who lacks courage has not realized or actualized her potential but this does not mean that courage is the same as human excellence or virtue. In fact, an excess of courage can lead to rashness or even ruthlessness. — Fooloso4
Adaptive habits.
NB: Wisdom is, I suspect, mastery over (any or some, many or all) maladaptive habits of judgment and conduct. Thus, we fools only seek ("love") wisdom but are never wise ourselves. :fire: — 180 Proof
Are these 4 virtues internally consistent? — Agent Smith
What I'm trying to say is, sometimes, knowing is not enough to start doing. I can very well know that ghosts don't exist, yet continue being scared of them at night. — Hello Human
This desire for predictability and consistency comes from a need for the consequences of our actions to be known in advance; that, with knowledge, we could act and always be judged correct or right. Without meeting those requirements we are "soothsayers" or "prophets", simply guessing. — Antony Nickles
Regarding the myth of recollection ( anamnesis ) if one does not already have some sense of virtue how can it be recognized? If virtue is completely absent then it cannot be taught. It must in some sense already be present in a person. — Fooloso4
You can, but would that be virtuous? It hibk that in this ethical scheme the right thing to do is to try to get rid of this phobia — Tobias
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