by: michael wittkowske nicole herriges danielle johnson nikki van riper

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THE VIRTUE THEORY By: Michael Wittkowske Nicole Herriges Danielle Johnson Nikki Van Riper

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Page 1: By: Michael Wittkowske Nicole Herriges Danielle Johnson Nikki Van Riper

THE VIRTUE THEORY

By: Michael WittkowskeNicole Herriges

Danielle JohnsonNikki Van Riper

Page 2: By: Michael Wittkowske Nicole Herriges Danielle Johnson Nikki Van Riper

THE MEANING OF VIRTUE From the Latin vir, “man” The original interpretation of having manly warlike qualities like courage and martial valor

Page 3: By: Michael Wittkowske Nicole Herriges Danielle Johnson Nikki Van Riper

FOUR MAIN CLASSIFICATION

Classical Greek Medieval Catholicism Modern Western View Eastern Asian Cultural View

Page 4: By: Michael Wittkowske Nicole Herriges Danielle Johnson Nikki Van Riper

CLASSICAL GREEK

Page 5: By: Michael Wittkowske Nicole Herriges Danielle Johnson Nikki Van Riper

MEDIEVAL CATHOLICISM

Add Three Theological Virtues to the Classical

Greek Faith

Hope Charity

Page 6: By: Michael Wittkowske Nicole Herriges Danielle Johnson Nikki Van Riper

SEVEN DEADLY SINS

Page 7: By: Michael Wittkowske Nicole Herriges Danielle Johnson Nikki Van Riper

MODERN WESTERN SOCIETY According to Joseph Pieper, Three Categories

Self- Control Self- Efficacy

Virtues of Regard

Page 8: By: Michael Wittkowske Nicole Herriges Danielle Johnson Nikki Van Riper

EASTERN ASIAN CULTURAL VIEW

Chinese Sage Confucius (551-479 BCE)

Main View on Humanity Humaneness

Kindheartedness Benevolence

Page 9: By: Michael Wittkowske Nicole Herriges Danielle Johnson Nikki Van Riper

BUDDHISM “the Buddha” means “the Enlightened

One”

Founded by Siddhartha Gautama (fifth century BCE)

Page 10: By: Michael Wittkowske Nicole Herriges Danielle Johnson Nikki Van Riper

THE DHAMMAPADA

To do no evilTo cultivate good

To purify one’s mind

This is the teaching of theBuddha

Page 11: By: Michael Wittkowske Nicole Herriges Danielle Johnson Nikki Van Riper

BUDDHIST KEY VIRTUES

Tranquility Nonattachment Compassion Truthful speech and thought “right

livelihood” Finding a way to live that does

not increase your own or others’ suffering; and nonviolence

Page 12: By: Michael Wittkowske Nicole Herriges Danielle Johnson Nikki Van Riper

TAOISM

Yin-Yang

Page 13: By: Michael Wittkowske Nicole Herriges Danielle Johnson Nikki Van Riper

TAO TE CHING

The founding expression of Taoism

Page 14: By: Michael Wittkowske Nicole Herriges Danielle Johnson Nikki Van Riper

TAOISM (A.K.A. DAOISM)

“Be still like the mountain and flow like a great river” Lao Tse

Embodies harmony of opposites “there would be no love without hate, no light without dark, no male without female”

Page 15: By: Michael Wittkowske Nicole Herriges Danielle Johnson Nikki Van Riper

MODERN PROFESSIONAL ETHICS

Hippocratic Oath (physician’s oath)

Teacher’s must be supportive and accurate with their information

Journalism must remain non-biased

Truck drivers and Airline Pilots must remain alert at all times

Page 16: By: Michael Wittkowske Nicole Herriges Danielle Johnson Nikki Van Riper

PHYSICIAN ASSISTED SUICIDES

Oregon, Washington, and Montana have legalized physician assisted suicide

Contradicts the Hippocratic Oath

“I will neither give a deadly drug to anybody if asked for it, nor will I make a suggestion to this effect”

Page 17: By: Michael Wittkowske Nicole Herriges Danielle Johnson Nikki Van Riper

CRITICISMS

Self-CenterednessAction-GuidingMoral Luck

Page 18: By: Michael Wittkowske Nicole Herriges Danielle Johnson Nikki Van Riper

QUESTIONS

How does professional ethics better our quality of goods and services?

Is living by a theory of virtues worthy?

Is the eastern society’s views more virtuous than our western society’s view?