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    LoyalLoyalJusticeJustice
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    The true goal toward which virtuous behavior leads is ple... — Carmelics
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    Home/Virtue Ethics
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    Supports→What humans ultimately seek is pleasure or delectation, both in this life and in the life to come.

    The true goal toward which virtuous behavior leads is pleasure or delectation.

    ConsequentialismVirtue Ethics
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    Virtue EthicsConsequentialism

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    No one naturally and voluntarily seeks virtue as an end in itself.Virtue is not sought for its own sake because it requires enduring harsh and bit...What humans ultimately seek is pleasure or delectation, both in this life and in...

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    When Aristotle says virtue makes the goal right, he must mean that del...82%What humans ultimately seek is pleasure or delectation, both in this l...81%The truly virtuous person cannot engage in hedonistic weighing of virt...80%Some virtuous actions sacrifice happiness in the particular instance, ...79%

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    SEP: lorenzo-valla
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    Valla’s reductive strategy has a clear aim: to equate this essential virtue of action, fortitude, with the biblical concept of love and charity. This step requires some hermeneutic manipulation, but the Stoic overtones of Cicero’s account in De officiis have prepared the way for it—ironically, perhaps, in view of Valla’s professed hostility towards Stoicism—since enduring hardship with Stoic patience is easily linked to the Pauline message that we become strong by being tested (II Cor. 12:10, qu

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