9. Virtue in General and the Division of Human Virtue
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Lecture Notes
Main Topics #
The Connection Between Act, Virtue, and Vice #
- A thing’s virtue is the quality or disposition that enables it to perform its own act well
- A thing’s vice is the condition that causes it to perform its own act badly
- Act and virtue are distinct but connected: virtue enables good action; vice results in poor action
- Examples:
- A knife’s virtue is sharpness (enabling good cutting); its vice is dullness
- A piano’s virtue is being in tune; its vice is being out of tune
- These virtues can be restored by those who possess the art: the knife-sharpener, the piano-tuner
How to Understand Human Virtue #
- To understand human virtue in particular, one must first understand virtue in general
- Human virtue must be understood in relation to man’s own act: the act with reason done well throughout life
- Since human virtue concerns acting with reason, we must understand what reason does
- Reason has two operations: (1) to understand things, and (2) to direct us in what we do and make
- Therefore human virtue divides into two kinds corresponding to these two operations
Division of Human Virtue into Two Kinds #
First Division: Thomas Aquinas’s Schema (Prima Secundae)
Virtues of Reason Itself (Intellectual Virtues):
- Natural understanding (ἐπιστήμη/intellectus): understanding things without having to reason them out
- Reasoned-out understanding (ἐπιστήμη/scientia): knowledge achieved through reasoning
- Wisdom (σοφία/sapientia): combines both and knows the first causes of all things
Virtues of Practical Reason:
- Foresight (φρόνησις/prudentia): right reason about doing; directing one’s own life
- Art (τέχνη/ars): right reason about making; concerned with producing external works
Virtues that Partake of Reason (Moral Virtues):
- Concern the will and emotions (fear, desire, anger)
- These powers “listen to reason” and can be directed by reason
- Enable proper moderation of appetite and emotion according to reason
Second Division: Aristotle’s Schema (Nicomachean Ethics, Book VI)
- Divides the five virtues of reason differently: 3 against 2
- Natural understanding and wisdom are about beginnings
- Reasoned-out understanding, foresight, and art are about what flows from the beginnings
- This distinction reflects what is more known vs. less known to us
Why Multiple Divisions Are Valid #
- Thomas’s division illuminates the connection between virtue and operations of reason (knowing vs. directing action)
- Aristotle’s division illuminates the distinction between beginnings and what flows from them (more known vs. less known to us)
- Both divisions are true and reveal different aspects of the same reality
- Analogy: The Our Father’s seven petitions can be divided as (1) four about the good + three about the bad, or (2) first three (heavenly) + last four (earthly). Both divisions are valid and reveal different truths about the petitions.
Natural Understanding and Wisdom: The Problem of Axioms #
- Natural understanding grasps self-evident axioms (“a whole is more than a part”; “nothing is before or after itself”)
- These axioms are often not recognized as axioms or explicitly identified
- We come to know them so naturally that we are unaware of how we learned them
- Wisdom knows the first causes that explain even the axioms
- The wise man must refute sophists who deny the axioms by showing the sophistical arguments’ errors
- Wisdom also grasps the different meanings of equivocal terms used in axioms (e.g., “whole” and “part”)
The Knowledge of Beginnings vs. Conclusions #
- A conclusion is defined as a statement known through other statements
- The beginnings (axioms) are defined negatively: statements known not through other statements
- This negative definition reflects that we understand beginnings by opposition to conclusions
- Paradox: The beginnings must be more known to us than what we derive from them, yet we struggle to articulate them explicitly
- Similar to how “desired for its own sake” means “desired but not for the sake of anything else” — an affirmative statement with negative meaning
Natural Understanding and the Eye/Ear Analogy #
- The eye serves two purposes: (1) to see beautiful things for their own sake, (2) to direct us in action
- A beautiful sunset from Sisi or a view of a valley is appreciated simply for the seeing of it
- But the eye also directs us in walking, making dinner, and all practical activities
- Similarly, the ear serves both purposes: hearing Handel’s Messiah for beauty, but also hearing “watch out!” that might save one’s life
- Reason operates the same way: it can understand things simply for the wonder of understanding them, and it can direct us in action
Key Arguments #
Why We Must Study Virtue Generally Before Particular Virtues #
- All things with their own act have corresponding virtue and vice
- Understanding virtue in general allows us to understand any particular virtue
- Once we grasp the connection between act and virtue, we see clearly why studying human virtue is necessary
- Therefore, we begin with the general principle before examining specific virtues
Why Reason Divides into Multiple Virtues #
- Reason performs two distinct operations: understanding and directing action
- Each operation has its own proper excellence (virtue)
- Understanding divides into three kinds: natural understanding, reasoned-out understanding, and wisdom
- Directing action divides into two kinds: foresight (for doing) and art (for making)
- Therefore, reason has at least five distinct virtues
Why Axioms Are Difficult to Recognize #
- Axioms are known through themselves, not through other statements
- We come to know them so naturally that we are unaware of the learning process
- Unlike learning French or Latin in high school (which requires effort we can observe), axioms are acquired like learning one’s native language (through osmosis, without conscious effort)
- Therefore, natural understanding is the least known to us of all the virtues of reason
- Yet it is the foundation of all other knowledge
Important Definitions #
Virtue (in general): The quality or disposition of a thing that enables it to perform its own act well and thereby makes it a good thing of its kind
Vice: The opposite of virtue; a condition that causes a thing to perform its own act badly
Intellectual Virtues / Virtues of Reason: Virtues that perfect reason itself in understanding or directing action. Berquist prefers this latter term.
Moral Virtues / Virtues that Partake of Reason: Virtues that perfect the will and emotions, enabling them to be directed by reason toward good action
Natural Understanding (νοῦς/intellectus): The virtue of reason that grasps self-evident axioms and first principles without reasoning
Reasoned-out Understanding (ἐπιστήμη/scientia): The virtue of reason that achieves knowledge through reasoning from principles
Wisdom (σοφία/sapientia): The virtue that knows the very first cause of all things; combines and perfects both natural understanding and reasoned-out understanding
Foresight (φρόνησις/prudentia): Right reason about doing; the virtue of practical wisdom that directs human action in living one’s life
Art (τέχνη/ars): Right reason about making; the virtue concerning the production of external works
Examples & Illustrations #
The Knife and Sharpness #
- A dull knife is a bad knife; sharpness is its virtue
- A knife can be restored to virtue by sharpening
- The knife-sharpener possesses the art of sharpening
- Illustrates that virtue is a specific condition, not just any good quality
The Piano and Tuning #
- An out-of-tune piano is vicious (bad)
- The piano-tuner knows how to give the piano its virtue
- Unlike the knife (which is sharpened), the piano requires different means of restoration
- Shows that different things require different means of acquiring their virtue
Seatbelt Laws #
- Every new invention (cars) generates new laws protecting human life
- All these laws are “fed by” the fundamental divine law against taking innocent human life
- One universal law generates particular laws for particular circumstances
- Illustrates the hierarchy: general principle generates particular applications
The Eye’s Dual Purpose #
- We have eyes to see beautiful things simply for their own sake (e.g., a sunset from Sisi valley)
- We also have eyes to direct us in practical activities (walking, making dinner)
- Both purposes are genuine and integral to why we have eyes
- Reason operates similarly: both to understand beautiful truths and to direct action
Learning Native Language vs. Learning French #
- Children learn their native language without being aware of the learning process
- One cannot point to a teacher of one’s native language; it was acquired from parents, siblings, relatives, everyone in the house
- Learning French in high school, by contrast, is effortful and we are consciously aware of the effort
- Natural understanding is like learning one’s native language: acquired so naturally we are unaware of how we learned it
The Master Pianist and the Out-of-Tune Piano #
- Even a great pianist complains when given an out-of-tune piano
- “You expect me, the great pianist, to play on this piano? It’s not in tune.”
- The piano lacks the virtue (being in tune), so the pianist cannot exercise his art properly
- Illustrates that even excellence in one’s own virtue cannot overcome the lack of virtue in the instrument
Axioms in Geometry Class #
- When students begin studying geometry in high school, they become aware of the effort of learning
- But when asked “when did you learn that a whole is more than a part?” they realize: “I always knew that”
- They cannot remember being taught this; it seems they always understood it
- Shows that some truths are so fundamental we cannot recollect their acquisition
Questions Addressed #
How do we understand human virtue in particular? #
- By first understanding virtue in general: the quality enabling a thing to perform its own act well
- By understanding man’s own act: the act with reason done well throughout life
- By determining what conditions enable reason to perform its operations excellently
What are the operations of reason? #
- (1) To understand things—to know them simply for the wonder of understanding
- (2) To direct us in what we do and make—to guide our actions and productions
- Both operations are essential to reason; both require corresponding virtues
Why does Aristotle divide the five virtues of reason differently than Thomas? #
- Aristotle divides them based on the distinction between beginnings and what flows from beginnings
- Thomas divides them based on the distinction between knowing and directing action
- Both divisions are valid; they illuminate different aspects of the same reality
- The divisions are not contradictory but complementary
How are axioms known? #
- They are known through themselves, not through other statements
- We do not learn them through formal teaching or conscious effort
- They are acquired so naturally that we often do not recognize them as axioms
- Yet they are the foundation of all other knowledge
Why is natural understanding the least known to us of the intellectual virtues? #
- Because we are not aware of how we acquired axioms
- Unlike learning geometry (where we consciously experience effort), axioms are acquired as naturally as learning one’s native language
- The more remote something is from our immediate experience, the less known it is to us
- Yet this least-known virtue is the foundation of all understanding
Connections to Prior Lectures #
- Builds on the definition of human end as “the act with reason done well throughout life”
- Applies the principle that understanding a particular requires understanding the universal
- Connects to the discussion of good and better
- Will lead to detailed study of moral virtues (books II-V of Nicomachean Ethics)