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    Each creature is naturally constituted to seek what is ap... — Carmelics
    Home/Virtue Ethics
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    Supports→The doctrine of oikeiôsis provides a foundation in nature for an objective ordering of preferences.

    Each creature is naturally constituted to seek what is appropriate or suitable to it.

    Virtue Ethics
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    Virtue Ethics

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    Consequentialism1 linkedNatural Theology1 linked

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    Other things being equal, it is objectively preferable to have health rather tha...The doctrine of oikeiôsis provides a foundation in nature for an objective order...This natural attachment to what is appropriate (oikeiôsis) is grounded in the st...

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    Each part of the world is naturally constituted so that it seeks what ...80%Humans are rational creatures, so what is appropriate to humans includ...79%This natural attachment to what is appropriate (oikeiôsis) is grounded...76%An intelligent creature ought to have the capacity to enjoy some kinds...75%

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    SEP: stoicism
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    Impulse, as noted above, is a movement of the soul toward an object. Though these movements are subject to the capacity for assent in fully rational creatures, impulse is present in all animate (self-moving) things from the moment of birth. The Stoics argue that the original impulse of ensouled creatures is toward what is appropriate for them, or aids in their self-preservation, and not toward what is pleasurable, as the Epicureans contend. Because the whole of the world is identical with the fu

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