Interaction Values and Beliefs: An Integration into Social Psychology by Mark Pettinelli - HTML preview

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Chapter 15

Value - Virtue1

To starve is a small matter, to lose one’s virtue is a great one.

Virtue (Latin: virtus, Greek: ρετ[U+03AE] "arete") is moral excellence. A virtue is a positive trait or quality subjectively deemed to be morally excellent and thus is valued as a foundation of prin-ciple and good moral being. Virtue is a behavior showing a high

moral standard and is a pattern of thought and behavior based on high moral standards.

Anyone could have their own idea of which qualities are virtuous, or certain societies could have their own set of qualities which they might deem virtuous. Some Hindu virtues are restraint, altruism, honesty, cleanliness, and peace. Some roman virtues were dignity, discipline, tenacity, frugality, and gravity. It all depends what you consider to be very moral. And of course something considered to be very moral is something that would be judged as being a very

good quality in terms of goodness - the right and proper thing to do.

People value virtues, you could say that virtues are values because they are qualities held in high esteem. Each individual has a core 1This content is available online at <http://cnx.org/content/m41606/1.1/>.

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CHAPTER 15. VALUE - VIRTUE

of underlying values that contribute to his or her system of beliefs, ideas and/or opinions. Someone could value kindness, and since

kindness is something which shows moral excellence, it would also be a virtue.

Why are some things considered to be virtues and others are not?

Why does the person making the decision of what is a virute matter so much? Everyone has their own ideas of what the "good" and

"right" thing to do is. In fact, one person or culture might think something really terrible and evil (from one persons perspective) is the right thing to do and a virtue. One persons perception of what evil is could be very unique, he or she could be one out of a million people that has that perspective - that doesn’t mean that the perspective is wrong, however.

How would one go about outlining what someone thought evil

was? If you can explain what your idea of evil is, then it could help you to realize what you think are virtues because it would

help your understanding of both good and evil (since good is the opposite of evil). You could list all the things you considered evil and all the things you considered to be "good" for starters.

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