Okay, again, Virutes are not dependant on society's ideals.
In different cultures, what is allowed and acceptable may change, but virtues will never change. IF your soceity or culture allows and accepts certain ideas or practices, that will create a mind frame for any person who is raised there as to what is right and wrong. Their perception of right and wrong is different.
For a human to flourish, their vitrues must be of a certain set, ALWAYS. This set of virtues DOES NOT change with soceity.
If a person adheres what is considered morally correct in their soceity
And IF what is considered morally correct in their society is different than what Aristotle considered morally right (that is, as i said way back, something of vaguely basing virtue off what achilles would do)
THEN the said person will not attain a flourishing human life, or eudemonia. EVEN though they beleive they are doing the right thing, it is not what Aristotle says is needed to acheive eudemonia.
Therefore soceities' pressures and ideals, while always present, DO NOT affect virtues. Society, is anything, only interferes with one's proper conceptualization of what is morally right or wrong.
Virtues are set in stone. They never change. They are what allow for human flourishing, which can only happen in one way.
As to my question, assuming you must choose one option, the utilitarian would say the innocent man should be killed, the deotologist would say the man should not be killed, and the virtue thoerist- im not sure. Lots of factors for that one.
Utilitarian - basically, the life of one over the life of many. If the man is killed, the mob is happy, the townspeople are happy, only the judge and the dead man are in pain. the man is dead, and the judge is feeling very conflicted becuase he/she knows they have put an innocent person to death.
However, it could be more complicated. What if the innocent man (dead man, convicted man, you know) had a very large family that cared for him deeply? you would have to think about the saddness of them. WHat if a boy serial killer was in the town (that is to say he would grow up to be a serial killer) what of the saddness he would create in the future? would that out-weigh the pain in the town?
It's true this is extensive, but to know _for certain_ that your action is right or wrong, you must think through all outcomes.
Deontolgist - Kant says it's wrong to lie no matter what. ever. he says that lying debases human communication and thus undermines all that rational human beings stand for, among other things. Thus _no matter what_ the scenario, lying is wrong, thus the judge would leave the man innocent and the townspeople would die.
-really Kant? is that what you really want? I don't know, I just don't like it. There should be exceptions.
Virtue Theory - Well this is tricky, because on one hand you must value human life, and on the other you must be honest and fair. To be honest and fair, the townspeople will die, and if the townspeople die, you have not valued human life.
There is no good outcome. No matter what, you will hurt one or your virtues. Aristotle says that 'virtues never confilct. THere is only an apparnet conflict' (paraphrasing) that is to say that a truly moral agent will never have issues. thus they would know how to react in this situation. Aristotle also says, however, that "there are some things it is better to die than do." now he is saying that, in such a case like this, there is no good outcome. Whatever happends wiill harm your integrity. Thus in extreme cases, it is better to die than do.
So it seems we are left to say that virtue theory would have to say that, instead of choosing a side, you should kill yourself.
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yeah. That's pretty harsh. But the point is that once you give in to either side, you lose what makes your life worthwhile (that is, your flourishing), and thus no longer want to live becasue you have been so damaged. Interesting.
@Chrisp yeah what you're saying is true, this is impossible, considering the townsfolk/mob will hear no reason. Your points about evolution are interesting too; what do mean by 'evolution cares about net effect?' I get the social context, but what does that have to do with evolution? is this more like social development?
@putin - hm i beleive i disagree when you say that flourishing is individualistic. It cant be, based on what i have said above. Seeing that virtues never change, flourishing wont change, either. Utilitarianism, you dont have to account for the entire world, but you should. thats the only way you can really know if what you are doing is right. I mean, i think that when you are on the neigherborhood planning commitee, you dont really have to worry about the world only because you probably wont effect it, however there is a chance you might, and this must be considered. Again, this is why i dont like util. in principle i like it, not in practice.