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    Despite this rational capacity, the ends they seek are of... — Carmelics
    Home/Moral Responsibility
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    Supports→The cause of defective characters pursuing worthless ends lies in the training of their passions, not in an impairment of their capacity to reason.

    Despite this rational capacity, the ends they seek are often worthless.

    Moral ResponsibilityVirtue Ethics
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    Moral ResponsibilityVirtue Ethics

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    The cause of defective characters pursuing worthless ends lies in the training o...Those defective in character possess cleverness, the rational skill needed to ac...We are assuming such persons are normal in their capacity to reason.

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    There can be humans in whom these rational capacities are altogether a...79%If, insofar as we are rational, we must will to develop capacities, th...76%Humanity is an end that every rational being must have.76%For promotion of an end to be rational, the end must be one that we ca...74%

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    SEP: aristotle-ethics
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    Aristotle replies: “Virtue makes the goal right, practical wisdom the things leading to it” (1144a7–8). By this he cannot mean that there is no room for reasoning about our ultimate end. For as we have seen, he gives a reasoned defense of his conception of happiness as virtuous activity. What he must have in mind, when he says that virtue makes the goal right, is that deliberation typically proceeds from a goal that is far more specific than the goal of attaining happiness by acting virtuously.

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