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    Intellectual activities are intrinsically good. — Carmelics
    Home/Virtue Ethics
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    Supports→The value of intellectual activities explains the value of knowledge.

    Intellectual activities are intrinsically good.

    Truth & KnowledgeVirtue Ethics
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    Virtue EthicsTruth & Knowledge

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    Knowledge derives its value from being the product or expression of intellectual...Knowledge has no intrinsic value independent of the intellectual activities that...The value of intellectual activities explains the value of knowledge.

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    Varying pleasant activities is conducive to well-being.82%An action can only be regarded as good if it has intrinsic value, sati...81%No one kind of activity or pursuit is intrinsically better than anothe...80%Whatever is non-instrumentally good must be good in virtue of its intr...80%

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    This reply might cause Ross problems. If he says knowledge is not intrinsically valuable but intellectual activities are, he cannot say an activity of the mind is better when it issues in knowledge (FE 270; Shaver 2011, 134n34). Perhaps Ross will have to say intellectual activities leading to knowledge are better, not because knowledge is itself good, but because of its instrumental properties, e.g., knowledge might lead us to being most effective at promoting justice or virtue or pleasure. A fo

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