LP5 - Virtue Ethics of Plato and Aristotle - Apulu
LP5 - Virtue Ethics of Plato and Aristotle - Apulu
LP5 - Virtue Ethics of Plato and Aristotle - Apulu
Instructions:
Based on your reading, which Virtue Ethics you like the most?
Connect with a classmate and share your answers.
What I thought:
A morally virtuous act is the virtue ethics that I like the most. Because it is relatable to me, it depicts what
some person like me today considers in making an action. Like to make a virtuous act there is no hidden
agenda or intention in your action or in simple words you need to be sincere in your actions. Some people
today even sometimes trick people because of the desires and advantages they want to get from the
person. In that case, the morally virtuous act is the virtue ethics applicable.
What Ericka Etouqilla thought:
After reading the article, I have realized that this will help me to discover and understand myself. Where I
can use my knowledge to learn and adopt what are the right things to do. I have discover that we should
strive to be a good person who possess positive attitude to people around us. Their views and ideas are
useful in understanding how a person can achieve an ethical life. I realized that we should be balance in
everything because it will help us to be fair or equal not just for our self but as well as to the people that
surrounds us. What I learned from Plato is that our knowledge comes from divine insight wherein it is a
matter of recollection as we are born possessing all knowledge and we can realized this knowledge through
experience. While in Aristotle, I have learned that in order for us to possess moral and ethical conduct we
must develop it into habit so that we can acquire and apply it in our everyday life. Thus, when it turns into
habit then we repeatedly act and correct our self when dealing with a situation where you have to chose
between bad or good.
Out of all the virtue ethics, I prefer Aristotle's “A Morally Virtuous Act”. For virtues embraces both the
purpose and action. Virtue is to be expressed in good purpose which shows that one’s action is sincere and
there is no any hidden ill-intention. Furthermore, this virtue ethics talked about the rule of “just middle” in
which one’s action should neither be excessive nor deficient. In which one must learn how to balance their
actions through reason by collaborating the desires and passion.
I want to be clarified more about Plato's teachings because it’s sometimes confusing. And the comparison
also of the teachings of Plato, Aristotle, Socrates, and Gautama.