So I had a continuation post planned, but I’ve decided to reorient things for the sake of the lay reader. Suffice to say that Plato’s ethics are grounded in a universal Good. Aristotle doesn’t require a universal; indeed, he suggests it wouldn’t be helpful anyway. Ethics, or character, is about the activities of the rational human soul that aim at well-living and express the human virtue. Activities expressing virtue are crafts like shoemaking, pottery or generalship, but they come from the specifically human capacity to reason and express a virtue peculiar to humans.
As an activity, the good life is only minimally dependent on outside factors like the stock market, natural disasters, and the malicious actions of others. The completely happy life, however, will probably require good outside things more than bad. The point is that we have power to discover and practice virtue; we do not require college degrees because virtue is an expression of our essential natures as human beings. Aristotle’s ethics are therefore very democratic because the “system requirements” for a full, good human life are few and generally present in most people.
The trick is they have to be practiced. Just as the cobbler must make many shoes before he can consistently make good shoes, humans must perform many courageous or just actions before they can consistently act courageously or justly.
I recently had an opportunity to act justly or unjustly with a person I do not even know. I had submitted a review of a book to a website run by a friend of mine and one of his friends. His friend objected to much of the tone of the piece and because he felt it assumed a certain worldview which he felt was inappropriate to the nature of the site. A variety of options presented themselves to me. I could accept the criticism and change the piece to suit his preferences as editor. I could obstinently refuse and accuse him of restricting my freedom as a writer. I could simply withdraw the piece.
I took about a week to settle my emotions, then reread the piece, and decided that I in fact disagreed with the editor’s objections – not that they were inappropriate objections, but that they didn’t apply to my piece. The hard part was writing the e-mail that argued against those objections while still trying to respect the objector, as is his dessert. This, I suppose, would be an ensemple of humility, generosity and maybe even a little courage. The point is not so much that I’m a virtuous person (though I hope I am) but that situations calling for virtuous behavior often appear in the mundane day-to-day events of our lives. As Jacob reflected this evening, some of us may be more inclined naturally to such and such virtues, while finding others difficult, and some of us will be just the reverse, but if virtues are crafts then we can all learn them – but we must do them.
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