Moral vices list

    • [DOC File]NICOMACHEAN ETHICS, BOOK I

      https://info.5y1.org/moral-vices-list_1_e1eddc.html

      However, greed is rarely defined or given a full treatment as to its nature and moral psychology. David Hume discusses the value of wealth and “riches” in his moral system. He also uses greed in the form of “avarice” in a list of vices and virtues when expounding on his theory of the passions.

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    • [DOC File]MORAL THEORIES

      https://info.5y1.org/moral-vices-list_1_de2c24.html

      : look up the following texts and list the virtues mentioned therein: Gal 5:22-3, Eph 4:2, Col.3:12-4, 1 Tim 6:11, Jas 3:17, 2 Pet.1:5-7. While doing this, notice that they are often mentioned along with lists of contrasting vices. We distinguish between the human virtues, and the theological virtues.

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    • [DOC File]University of Notre Dame

      https://info.5y1.org/moral-vices-list_1_713507.html

      : CCC 1805-1811 (The four main natural virtues upon which all others “hinge”) [See LIST OF 50+ VIRTUES from Thomas Aquinas] The moral (human, cardinal) virtues are mainly acquired by human effort They are the fruit of and seed for morally good actions.

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    • Prayer of St. Thomas Aquinas - static1.1.sqspcdn.com

      Bad people develop vices rather than virtues. Because virtue theorists stress moral development, especially moral development in children, vicious (bad) people might have difficulty overcoming vices and becoming virtuous (good) people. Thus, if you had a bad childhood, from a moral standpoint, you might have a bad life overall throughout adulthood.

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    • philarchive.org

      Most people have local virtues or vices to some degree, which are indexed to very . specific situations such as honesty in the courtroom or compassion in the mall. Most people have Mixed Traits to some degree, which are cross-situationally consistent . and stable over time, but are neither traditional moral virtues nor traditional moral vices.

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    • [DOC File]Of Hume and Avarice - University of Arizona

      https://info.5y1.org/moral-vices-list_1_328315.html

      For Gregory says (Moral. xxxi, 45): "The leading vices seem to worm their way into the deceived mind under some kind of pretext, but those which follow them provoke the soul to all kinds of outrage, and confuse the mind with their wild outcry." Now envy is seemingly a most grave sin, for Gregory says (Moral. v, 46): "Though in every evil thing ...

      virtues and vices


    • Moral Virtues and Vices | Jami' al-Sa'adat (The Collector of Felicities…

      Over time, many vices will flux between categories, becoming more or less familiar with the vagaries of time and culture. Historically, this happens to the moral vices, too, with once-familiar vices like cupidity and concupiscence having now become esoteric – signs of what DeYoung (2009: 26) calls the “fluidity of the vice tradition.”

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    • [DOC File]Catholic moral teaching - Homestead

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      Virtues, vices and moral learning. Virtue is a central ethical concept. This section examines the nature of virtue. One important debate concerns how best to understand Aristotle’s influential account of virtue as consisting in a ‘mean’ between extremes. Another, also originating in Aristotle, concerns the question to what extent virtues ...

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    • [DOC File]All seven capital sins discussed in II-II

      https://info.5y1.org/moral-vices-list_1_7d3a11.html

      This essay was published in the Fall 2001 issue of the International Journal of Applied Philosophy. Recent philosophical interest in a more classical view of morality has led beyond an exclusive focus on actions to an exploration of virtues, vices, character traits, and the “moral emotions.”

      examples of virtues and vices


    • Syllabus - University of Cambridge

      In Book IV, Aristotle completes his list of ethical virtues and vices (See table above, in Book II, for the list of all of them), except for the supreme virtue, justice, to which he devotes all of Book V. BOOK V. Book V is devoted to the supreme ethical virtue, justice, which, Aristotle explains, encompasses all the others.

      virtues and their vices


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