• What Moral Exemplars Can Teach Us About Virtue, Psychology, and Ourselves Giebel, Heidi M. 2022 American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly , Vol. 96 , Issue 2 , S. 235 ff. ( Zeitschrift ) Englisch 1051-3558 | 2153-8441 10.5840/acpq2022120246 Abstract

    In this article, I discuss ethical lessons we can learn from the stories and beliefs of moral exemplars—and how these insights can complement and extend the knowledge we gain through theoretical study. First, exemplars teach us psychological lessons about the way in which virtue is developed and expressed: e.g., about role modeling and post-traumatic growth. Second, they teach us philosophical lessons about the nature of virtue itself and of particular ethical virtues: e.g., about how virtuous people deliberate and how they perceive the mean of virtue. Third, exemplars’ stories teach us personal lessons about our own lives and character: e.g., about how far we are from acting or even thinking like virtuous people—and how much better our lives would be if we were genuinely virtuous. I conclude by discussing an ethical puzzle moral exemplars have not helped me solve: apparent disunity of the virtues.

    Schlagwörter

    Catholic Tradition | Contemporary Philosophy | History of Philosophy | Philosophy and Religion

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Giebel, Heidi M.
Catholic Tradition
Contemporary Philosophy
History of Philosophy

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