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    LoyalLoyalJusticeJustice
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    Because virtue is filled with toil and hardship, no one n... — Carmelics
    Home/Virtue Ethics
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    Challenges→The Stoic and Peripatetic view that virtue is the end of life is mistaken.

    Because virtue is filled with toil and hardship, no one naturally seeks it as an end in itself.

    Virtue Ethics
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    Virtue Ethics

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    The Stoic and Peripatetic view that virtue is the end of life is mistaken.

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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    Virtuous behavior is difficult, requiring harsh and bitter afflictions.
    What is genuinely sought as an end must be something people naturally and volunt...

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    No one naturally and voluntarily seeks virtue as an end in itself.87%True virtue consists in benevolence to being and complacence (delight)...85%Moral virtue is a disposition to choose actions lying in the mean rela...84%True virtue aims at the good of being in general.84%

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    SEP: lorenzo-valla
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    Valla’s reductive strategy has a clear aim: to equate this essential virtue of action, fortitude, with the biblical concept of love and charity. This step requires some hermeneutic manipulation, but the Stoic overtones of Cicero’s account in De officiis have prepared the way for it—ironically, perhaps, in view of Valla’s professed hostility towards Stoicism—since enduring hardship with Stoic patience is easily linked to the Pauline message that we become strong by being tested (II Cor. 12:10, qu

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