Virtue
Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the history of virtue. When Socrates asked the question ‘How should man live?’ Plato and Aristotle answered that man should live a life of virtue. Plato claimed there were four great virtues - Temperance, Justice, Prudence and Courage and the Christian Church added three more - Faith, Hope and Love. But where does the motivation for virtue come from? Do we need rules to tell us how to behave or can we rely on our feelings of compassion and empathy towards other human beings? Shakespeare’s Iago says “Virtue! A fig! ‘tis in ourselves that we are thus or thus. Our bodies are our gardens to the which our wills are gardeners. “ So is virtue a character trait possessed by some but not others? Is it derived from reason? Or does it flow from the innate sympathies of the human heart? For the last two thousand years philosophers have grappled with these ideas, but now in the twenty first century a modern reappraisal of virtue is taking the argument back to basics with Aristotle.
→ Listen on BBC Sounds website
Guests
- Galen Strawson
3 episodes
Professor of Philosophy at the University of Reading - Miranda Fricker
4 episodes
Lecturer in Philosophy at Birkbeck, University of London - Roger Crisp
2 episodes
Uehiro Fellow and Tutor in Philosophy at St Anne's College, Oxford
Related episodes
-
Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics
2 Nov, 2023 170 Ethics -
Happiness
24 Jan, 2002 100 Philosophy -
Friendship
2 Mar, 2006 170 Ethics -
Aristotle’s Politics
6 Nov, 2008 320 Political science -
Authenticity
14 Mar, 2019 100 Philosophy -
The Examined Life
9 May, 2002 100 Philosophy -
Stoicism
3 Mar, 2005 100 Philosophy -
Philippa Foot
16 May, 2024 170 Ethics -
Heroism
6 May, 2004 930 History of the Ancient World -
Plato’s Gorgias
25 Nov, 2021 180 Ancient, medieval, and Eastern philosophy
Programme ID: p005489r
Episode page: bbc.co.uk/programmes/p005489r
Auto-category: 170 (Ethics)
Hello (First sentence from this episode)
Hello. When Socrates asked the question, how should man live, Plato and Aristotle answered that man should live a life of virtue.