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    Health, pleasure, and wealth are indifferent to happiness. — Carmelics
    Home/Virtue Ethics
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    Supports→Health, pleasure, and wealth do not add to or take away from one's possession of the good.

    Health, pleasure, and wealth are indifferent to happiness.

    ConsequentialismVirtue Ethics
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    Virtue EthicsConsequentialism

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    Health, pleasure, and wealth do not add to or take away from one's possession of...These assets do not add to one's virtue nor detract from it.

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    Health, pleasure, and wealth do not add to or take away from one's pos...85%Health, pleasure, and wealth are not virtues.85%The end is not happiness, because happiness is merely the sum of parti...84%Human happiness does not consist in physical health, attractive appear...84%

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    They argue that health, pleasure, beauty, strength, wealth, good reputation, and noble birth are neither good nor bad. Since they can be used well or badly and the good is invariably good, these assets are not good. The virtues, however, are good (DL VII 102–103), since they are perfections of our rationality, and only rationally perfected thoughts and decisions can possibly have the features of harmony and order in which goodness itself consists. Since possessing and exercising virtue is happin

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