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    The Stoics identify moral virtues with knowledge, which i... — Carmelics
    Home/Virtue Ethics
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    Supports→For humans, moral virtue is the most appropriate good and the only genuine good.

    The Stoics identify moral virtues with knowledge, which is the perfection of rational nature.

    Truth & KnowledgeVirtue Ethics
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    Virtue EthicsTruth & Knowledge

    Key Terms

    knowledge(Distinguished from mere true belief, which may be the product of indoctrination and need not exercise deliberative capacities.)
    Justified true belief — true belief that has been arrived at through the exercise of deliberative capacities, including comparison of and deliberation among alternatives.

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    For humans, moral virtue is the most appropriate good and the only genuine good.Humans are rational creatures, so what is appropriate to humans includes the per...Therefore, moral virtue is the only genuine good for humans.Whatever is the perfection of one's nature is what is genuinely good for that cr...

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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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