Difference between revisions of "JAN 23"

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==2. JAN 23: Unit 1: Food, Health, and Nutrition==
+
==3: JAN 23. ==
  
===Assigned Work===
+
===Assigned===
  
:*Sonnenbergs, C 1, "What is the Microbiota and Why Should I Care?" (26)
+
:*Sapolsky C10 – “The Evolution of Behavior,(360-373; 13). Key concepts: multi-level selection theory (MLS)Cultural selection pressures? 
:*Read [[Nutrition, Satisfaction, Practicality and Dietary Change]]At least up to, "Designing your diet with NSP.
+
:*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PrvtOWEXDIQ Aristotle and Virtue Theory: PBS Crash Course in Philosophy #38] - Key concepts: The use of reason to school emotionsVirtue as a mean between extremes.
:*View this movie on the Microbiome:
 
::*'''Microbiota: The Amazing Gut'''. 2019. Sylvie Gilman. "Hidden deep in our intestines, 100,000 billion bacteria are keeping us healthy by producing a range of molecules. Although their names may be perplexing: Fecali bacterium, Roseburia, Akkermansia mucinifila, Eubacterium halli, as well as being invisible to the naked eye, they could revolutionize the future of medicine. That is, if our modern lifestyle doesn't wipe them out first."  On Amazon Prime.  [https://www.amazon.com/gp/video/detail/B08G7PX2XD/ref=atv_dp_amz_det_c_UTPsmN_1_1/ref=dv_web_auth_no_re_sig?ie=UTF8&]
 
::*If you've never seen "Food INC", please plan to watch it some timeA copy is in the shared folder.
 
  
 
===In-Class===
 
===In-Class===
  
:*Review of 1st Day Food Survey
+
:*Review Prisoner's Dilemma
:*NSP segment
+
:*Details on how to submit your practice writing. 
 +
:*Everyday Ethics: Thinking about virtue ethics in your own experience.
 +
:*Writing: The drafting process -- when to start? The revision process - what to look for.
 +
:*Lecture Segment: Some Preliminaries about Ethical theory and objectivity
  
===Using the NSP model to think about dietary design and dietary goals===
+
===Sapolsky, Chapter 10: The Evolution of Human Behavior 354-374===
  
:*Working from the wiki document [[Nutrition,_Satisfaction,_Practicality_and_Dietary_Change]] we will look at some of the interactions of N, S, and P.
+
:*'''How can cooperation get started and become stable?''' 353-
 +
::*In other words, how does "tit for tat" survive among defectors? Coalitions, green beard effects.
 +
::*Sometimes natural events cut a group off.  Inbreeding promotes stronger kin bonds. That group may outperform others once they out migrate.  (Give example from Henrich of Inuits with meat sharing behaviors.  A better "cooperative package".) 
 +
::*Effects of ind. selection, kin selection, and reciprocal altruism:
 +
:::*Tournament vs. Pair bonding  - lots of traits and behaviors follow from sexual dimorphism.  This also happens in degrees.
 +
:::*Parent-Offspring competition - in spite of kin selection, there are some "zero sum" situations bt parents and offspring.  parent-offspring weaning conflict and mother-fetus conflict. Over insulin. Dad even has a vote through paternal "imprinted genes," which promote fetal growth at expense of mom. (Intersexual Genetic Conflict)
  
===Visual Aids for thinking about your Microbiota===
+
:*'''Multilevel Selection MLS'''
 +
::*Remember the "bad" group selection from the beginning of the chapter?  Group selection returns in the last few decades.  (Tell story of visits with Bio prof friends over the years.)
 +
::*Genotypic and Phenotypic levels of explanation - unibrows.
 +
::*Organism (expressed individual) is a vehicle of the genome, but the genome has alot to say about how the organism turns out.  .
 +
::*Big debate in Biology. Three positions: 1. Dawkins took the "selfish gene" view that the best level of explanation is individual genes. 2. Others say the genome - "a chicken is an egg's way of making another egg" (It's the whole genome travelling through evolutionary "space".); finally, 3. Others like Gould take the phenotype.  After all, it's visible to the world.  Selection could operate on a single phenotypic trait or the whole individual.  Dawkins cake metaphor. 362.  (So that's really four levels of selection.)
  
[[file:intestines.jpg]]
+
::*'''Four levels and counting'''. Theorists might favor one or more levels as relatively more important than others.  Each level involves possible selection pressure or adaptive value in meeting a pressure. The peacock’s plumage is both.
 +
:::*1. Genetic traits. Single selfish genes use us to get into the next gen.
 +
:::*2. Genome. The recipe is what’s passed on, so focus on that.
 +
:::*3. Phenotypic trait. Individual expressed traits (potential to make money).
 +
:::*4. Phenotype.  It’s the “whole package - whole person” that we choose.
  
[[File:microbiomepic.png]]
+
:::*'''Fifth level''': Neo-group selection - the idea that some heritable traits are maladaptive for the individual, but increase the group's fitness (note difference from the bad old group selection).
 +
::::*Examples:
 +
:::::*Encouraging patriotism might lead you to enlist, taking a fitness risk that we benefit from.
 +
:::::*Jailing someone for their reproductive life is a serious fitness hit, but we're better off with murderers locked up.
 +
:::::*
  
===Sylvie Gilman, "Microbiota: The Amazing Powers of the Gut"===
+
::*Neo-group selection happens when groups impose fitness costs or benefits on members or sub-groups.
 +
:::*Positive (fitness benefits): zags helping zags, (but is that totally positive?). 
 +
:::*Negative for some, positive for others(fitness costs): Slavery, racism, class bias, criminal punishment, patriotism, heroism, priests.
  
:*Opening scene: Birth of a child. We are colonized at birth.
+
:*Some scientists agree that neo-group selection can occur, but think it's rare. Sapolsky points out that it is not rare in humans, due to Green Beard effects.
  
:*Microbiota research -- stoolsSequencing technology.  The microbiome is the collective 100,000 billionMore than # of cells in your body. Why?  (extended genome hypothesis -- example Vitamin C)
+
:*Remember "Green Beard" effects from p. 341 -- a thought experiment in extending/recognizing kinWith neo-group, we go further, and hypothesize that we can form groups around almost anything (sport teams in an imaginary baseball league)Human mind does not limit partiality or commitment to kin or even social group.  
  
:*Meet the Sonnenbergs5:10 - Microbes manufacture compounds, drugs for us. Digestion, disease protection, vitamin production, brain effects (serotonin)Analogy to a forest.
+
:*Where do we fit in? AND US?
 +
::*We're bit of chimp and a bit of bonobo.  Men 10% larger, 20% heavier than women.  Slight dimorphism. Not quite pair-bonding, not quite tournament
 +
::*'''US and Individual Selection''': Example of divorce: natural experiment when cultural taboos are lifted.  Note that increased divorce rates are confined to the same percentage of population.  Lift culture and you get to see who the "less pair-bonding" people areLikewise with historically powerful (and not very romantic) rulers.  Point: with absolute power, tyrants often adopt extreme reproductive behaviors with many hundreds of women, if possible.
 +
::*'''US and Kin selection''': Still very powerful, most feuds are clan based, but we can go to war against kin, and we give to strangers. We can be disgusted by people who betray their families: Story of Pavlik Morozov, 368.  368: study about preferring dog to x, y, z.  vmPFC involved. 
 +
::*Why do humans deviate from kin selection so muchBiologists also want to find '''mechanisms'''.  Animals recognize kin by MHC or imprinted genes.  We do it cognitively. Much more flexibility.
  
:*'''Effects of modern diet''' - less genetic variety.  More thinning.  Switches to African aboriginal eaters.  Jeff Leach, “Dr. Shit”.  Hudza in Tanzania.  2x diversity of gut microbes.  Amazon study, also.  50% more diverse.  Ancestral lifestyles maintain microbiome diversity.
 
  
:*14:15 — '''effects of antibiotics'''.  Can cause extinction of species.  Like a bomb.  Mouse studies - even short courses of antibiotics can affect metabolism — weight gain.  Immune system changed.  Asthma.  Effects on young mice more profound.  Possible hypothesis: early exposure < 6 months predicts obesity and asthma by age 7.
 
  
:*18:14 — Caesarean births. More research by Maria Gloria Dominguez-Bello, Rutgers. New practice of feeding c-section babies with mix of vaginal germs. 
+
===Some Preliminaries about Objectivity in Ethics and Features of Ethical Discourse===
  
:*Back to Hudza — health of gut depends on health of environment around us. '''high fiber diet''' may be a variable.  22:30. What is effect of low fiber diet on individual and generations?  Short chain fatty acids SCFAs (also discussed in Sonnenberg reading.  Erica Sonnenberg — mouse study of low fiber diet over 4 generations.  Loss of 1/2 of diversity. 
+
:*'''Where should we look for "moral goodness"?'''
 +
::*Intentions (Kantian),
 +
::*Person (a virtuous person) (Aristotle),
 +
::*Consequences (Mill, Singer - Utilitarian)
  
:*25:05 — '''Effects of food additives''': Emulsifiers in industrial ice cream and other industrial foods.  E433 and E466 - Two widespread emulsifiers in industrial foods (ice cream, salad dressings, candy).  Mouse studies again - loss of diversity and thinning of gut mucus. 28:05.  Produces intestinal inflammation, obesity, and type 2 diabetes. 27:55 - cool mouse gut cross section showing mucus layer!  >anxiety!  (Note how this affects your perception of the supermarket)
+
:*(The following is pretty standard, but was drawn from Peter Singer's classic, ''Practical Ethics'')
  
:*'''Obesity research''' suggest microbiota differences. 32:26 - Study: Same diet, different outcomes, correlated with MB diversity. 
+
:*'''What does it mean to say "values vary by culture"?  Is it always "bad relativism"?'''
  
:*'''Inflammatory bowel disease''' — also Crone’s diseaseAbsence of ''Faecalibacterium prausnitzii'' (FP) implicatedMore mouse studiesFP has protective effect. Edge of research: Can we add missing bacteria to remedy these conditions?
+
:*Singer's arguments against cultural relativism:
 +
::*Cultural Relativism (the old discussion): Ethics varies by culture.  Singer: This is true and false, same act under different conditions may have different value, but this is '''superficial relativism'''.  For example, existence of birth control led to a general change in sexual ethics. The moral principle in question here is: don't have kids that you're not ready to care for. That principle might remain the same and be objective, but the prohibition on casual sex might change(What dropped out was the idea that sex before marriage was sinful.)  
  
:*'''Fecal transplants''' 37:30''Clostridium difficile'' infection causes 30,000 deaths a yearOften following heavy antibiotic treatmentHigh cure rate >90%.
+
::*Note: There is strong polling data on advisability of living together prior to marriageNow, yes; 60 years ago, noSo cultural change itself doesn't tell you whether moral principles are changingThe consistent principle here?
  
:*41:30 Fecal Bank. Open biome, USA. Very selective 3%!.  10,000 treatments a year.  44:15: Segment on Crone’s patient. Tom Gravel.  Approached his neighbor for donor stool.  200 donations!  Cured.  His gastroent impressed.  Don't try this at home!
+
:*'''What kind of conversation is an ethical conversation'''
  
:*Oncology segment — immunotherapyImpoverished microbiota may diminish efficacy of anti-cancer treatmentsIn human study, effects from anti-biopics prior to cancer treatment, less effective response to treatment. A specific bacterium identified: ''Akkermansia Muciniphila''.  More mice.
+
::*Subjectivist Relativism - This position may not be held by any thoughtful person, but it sounds like what some people say when they start studying values and becomes confused or cynical.   
 +
:::*The Position: "Wrong" means "I disapprove" or "my society disapproves")
 +
:::*The Problems:
 +
::::*If this sort of relativism is true, polls could determine ethicsBut they don't.
 +
::::*Deep subjectivism can't making sense of disagreement. Ethics is a kind of conversation.
 +
::::*There is just too much research suggesting that "I approve" isn't philosophical "rock bottom".
  
:*Terlingua - Also a site for Leach.  Think like an ecologist about your gut.  '''6 week high fiber diet can increase diversity by 30%.'''  56:00 Listen to the Sonnenbergs. Treat your gut like a pet!
+
:*Singer: Ok to say the values aren't objective like physics (aren't facts about the world), but not sensible to deny the meaningfulness of moral disagreement and ethical reasoning.
  
===Sonnenbergs, C 1, "What is the Microbiota and Why Should I Care?"===
+
:*An evolutionist's twist: A society's ethical culture can produce positive, neutral, or negative outcomes for human flourishing.  In this sense, values have objective consequences in meeting selection pressures (both natural and cultural). (Vax values, for example.)
  
:*How the world looks to a microbiologist! "Without microbes humans wouldn't exist, but if we all disappeared, few of them would notice." 10
+
::*The sorts of reasons that count as ethical: '''universalizable''' ones. Can't just appeal to one person or group's interestNote: most standard ethical theories satisfy this requirement, yet yield different analysis and adviceWe will look at the specific form of universalization in each theory we discuss, but you could say this is a kind of defining feature of ethical discourse.
:*Introduction to the Tube and digestion
 
:*Microbiota Case against the Western Diet
 
::*Inflammatory Bowel Disease.  People on Western Diet wo/IBD may still not have healthy M
 
::*Sets the history of human diet in context. Agriculture already a big change, but then industrial ag / industrial foods
 
::*Adaptability of M remarkable. Makes us omnivores.  “Microbiota plasticity”
 
::*Baseline M - cant' be health Western Diet eatersstudies of groups like Hadza -- far more diverse.
 
::*19 - Evolved Symbiotic relationship between us and bacteria --
 
:::*Microbiota — Microbiome (the collective genotypes of the residents intestines)Example of Japanese seaweed consuming bacteria. 
 
:::*types of symbiotic relationship - parasitic, commensal (one party benefits, little or no effect on the other), mutualism.  Microbiota and us have a symbiotic, mutualist relationship.  Think of them as an extension of our genome.  !
 
:::*The heart warming story of Tremblaya princeps and Moranella endobia.  (21)  -- why we should be happy mutualists.  Delegation and division of labor might create resiliance. But our fates are linked!
 
  
:*22-30 - Cultural History and History of Science on Bacteria -- or, how germs got such a bad name.
+
===Philosophical Moral Theories: Virtue Ethics===
::*Pasteur -- germ theory of diseases. 
 
::*The Great Stink 1858 London, Miasma theory disproved, Cholera bacterium, not isolated until near end of century.  Dr. Robert Koch.  Because of this history we tend to think of bacteria as threats. 
 
::*60-70's: Abbigail Salyers: early pioneer, 2008: Human Microbiome Project. Note how recent this field is.  One of the pioneers was still working in 2005. 
 
::*Note research questions on p. 28.
 
::*Contemporary research: gnotobiotic mice.  early fecal transplant studies of.[[https://gordonlab.wustl.edu/index_2017.html Dr. Jeffrey Gordon]].
 
  
 +
:*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PrvtOWEXDIQ PBS Aristotle and Virtue Theory: Crash Course Philosophy #38]
  
:*Some functions of the Microbiota:
+
:*concepts from video...
::*Harvesting calories from MACs
 
::*immune system support
 
::*resistance to harmful bacteria
 
::*regulation of metabolism
 
::*production of seratonin
 
::*production of SCFAs, which affect weight control
 
::*involved in production of anti-carcinogenic compounds.
 
::*prevention of IBS and other disorders of the gut.
 
  
===Some implications of Microbiome research===
+
::*Virtue — general idea of being an excellent person.  Also, specific lists of virtues (vary by time and culture)
  
:*Food feeds you and your extended genomeYou are eating for trillions!
+
:*A bit of Aristotle’s theory of virtue and human nature:  fixed nature, species eternal, '''proper function (telos),''' distinctive aspect of function: being rational and political.  (Note that modern virtue theorists aren't committed to some of A's false ideas.)
:*Macronutrient information is only part of assessing the potential nutrition from food. MACs (next class)
+
 
:*It’s all about the tube!
+
::*Virtue is natural to usLike an acorn becoming a tree. Being virtuous is being the best of the kind of thing you are.  A deep intuition supports this developmental approach. (Pause to consider personal examples of the reality of moral development.)
 +
 
 +
::*Theory of the Golden Mean: Virtue as mean between extremes of emotion:  Ex. Courage (story of stopping the mugger), Honesty, Generosity. (Let's give our own examples.)  Virtue as training of emotional response in relation to knowledge of circumstances and the good.
 +
 
 +
::*How do you acquire virtue? Experience.  Practical Wisdom cultivated through habituation.  Follow a moral exemplar (virtue coach). Good parenting and shaping by healthy family.  It's a training program in becoming the best human you can be based on your "telos". 
 +
 
 +
::*What if we don’t want to become virtuous?  What is the motivation to virtue?  The pursuit of a happy life that “goes well”.  Eudaimonia.  Human flourishing.  Challenge and development of talents. Should be attractive. Connection between virtue and happiness not guaranteed for Aristotle, but could be tighter in other versions.
 +
 
 +
:*Additional points:
 +
 
 +
::*centrality of virtues and practical wisdom.  Is practical wisdom real? 
 +
::*historic variability and list of virtues. Curiosity was a vice in Medieval Europe.  Check out virtue lists on [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtue Virtue Wiki].
 +
 
 +
===Everyday Ethics: Thinking about Virtue in your own experience===
 +
 
 +
:*Scroll through the Virtue wiki page [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtue Virtue Wiki]. Notice the various list of virtues.  Write down 5 that are important to you in your life right now and that you would say you are working on.  Report your results with [https://forms.gle/AfYEv7wQhQUA1BwL9 this form]
 +
 
 +
:*Then, in your group discussion, identify virtues that you have made alot of progress on and ones that you are still working on.  Record some of each to report back to the class.

Latest revision as of 19:35, 23 January 2024

3: JAN 23.

Assigned

In-Class

  • Review Prisoner's Dilemma
  • Details on how to submit your practice writing.
  • Everyday Ethics: Thinking about virtue ethics in your own experience.
  • Writing: The drafting process -- when to start? The revision process - what to look for.
  • Lecture Segment: Some Preliminaries about Ethical theory and objectivity

Sapolsky, Chapter 10: The Evolution of Human Behavior 354-374

  • How can cooperation get started and become stable? 353-
  • In other words, how does "tit for tat" survive among defectors? Coalitions, green beard effects.
  • Sometimes natural events cut a group off. Inbreeding promotes stronger kin bonds. That group may outperform others once they out migrate. (Give example from Henrich of Inuits with meat sharing behaviors. A better "cooperative package".)
  • Effects of ind. selection, kin selection, and reciprocal altruism:
  • Tournament vs. Pair bonding - lots of traits and behaviors follow from sexual dimorphism. This also happens in degrees.
  • Parent-Offspring competition - in spite of kin selection, there are some "zero sum" situations bt parents and offspring. parent-offspring weaning conflict and mother-fetus conflict. Over insulin. Dad even has a vote through paternal "imprinted genes," which promote fetal growth at expense of mom. (Intersexual Genetic Conflict)
  • Multilevel Selection MLS
  • Remember the "bad" group selection from the beginning of the chapter? Group selection returns in the last few decades. (Tell story of visits with Bio prof friends over the years.)
  • Genotypic and Phenotypic levels of explanation - unibrows.
  • Organism (expressed individual) is a vehicle of the genome, but the genome has alot to say about how the organism turns out. .
  • Big debate in Biology. Three positions: 1. Dawkins took the "selfish gene" view that the best level of explanation is individual genes. 2. Others say the genome - "a chicken is an egg's way of making another egg" (It's the whole genome travelling through evolutionary "space".); finally, 3. Others like Gould take the phenotype. After all, it's visible to the world. Selection could operate on a single phenotypic trait or the whole individual. Dawkins cake metaphor. 362. (So that's really four levels of selection.)
  • Four levels and counting. Theorists might favor one or more levels as relatively more important than others. Each level involves possible selection pressure or adaptive value in meeting a pressure. The peacock’s plumage is both.
  • 1. Genetic traits. Single selfish genes use us to get into the next gen.
  • 2. Genome. The recipe is what’s passed on, so focus on that.
  • 3. Phenotypic trait. Individual expressed traits (potential to make money).
  • 4. Phenotype. It’s the “whole package - whole person” that we choose.
  • Fifth level: Neo-group selection - the idea that some heritable traits are maladaptive for the individual, but increase the group's fitness (note difference from the bad old group selection).
  • Examples:
  • Encouraging patriotism might lead you to enlist, taking a fitness risk that we benefit from.
  • Jailing someone for their reproductive life is a serious fitness hit, but we're better off with murderers locked up.
  • Neo-group selection happens when groups impose fitness costs or benefits on members or sub-groups.
  • Positive (fitness benefits): zags helping zags, (but is that totally positive?).
  • Negative for some, positive for others(fitness costs): Slavery, racism, class bias, criminal punishment, patriotism, heroism, priests.
  • Some scientists agree that neo-group selection can occur, but think it's rare. Sapolsky points out that it is not rare in humans, due to Green Beard effects.
  • Remember "Green Beard" effects from p. 341 -- a thought experiment in extending/recognizing kin. With neo-group, we go further, and hypothesize that we can form groups around almost anything (sport teams in an imaginary baseball league). Human mind does not limit partiality or commitment to kin or even social group.
  • Where do we fit in? AND US?
  • We're bit of chimp and a bit of bonobo. Men 10% larger, 20% heavier than women. Slight dimorphism. Not quite pair-bonding, not quite tournament
  • US and Individual Selection: Example of divorce: natural experiment when cultural taboos are lifted. Note that increased divorce rates are confined to the same percentage of population. Lift culture and you get to see who the "less pair-bonding" people are! Likewise with historically powerful (and not very romantic) rulers. Point: with absolute power, tyrants often adopt extreme reproductive behaviors with many hundreds of women, if possible.
  • US and Kin selection: Still very powerful, most feuds are clan based, but we can go to war against kin, and we give to strangers. We can be disgusted by people who betray their families: Story of Pavlik Morozov, 368. 368: study about preferring dog to x, y, z. vmPFC involved.
  • Why do humans deviate from kin selection so much. Biologists also want to find mechanisms. Animals recognize kin by MHC or imprinted genes. We do it cognitively. Much more flexibility.


Some Preliminaries about Objectivity in Ethics and Features of Ethical Discourse

  • Where should we look for "moral goodness"?
  • Intentions (Kantian),
  • Person (a virtuous person) (Aristotle),
  • Consequences (Mill, Singer - Utilitarian)
  • (The following is pretty standard, but was drawn from Peter Singer's classic, Practical Ethics)
  • What does it mean to say "values vary by culture"? Is it always "bad relativism"?
  • Singer's arguments against cultural relativism:
  • Cultural Relativism (the old discussion): Ethics varies by culture. Singer: This is true and false, same act under different conditions may have different value, but this is superficial relativism. For example, existence of birth control led to a general change in sexual ethics. The moral principle in question here is: don't have kids that you're not ready to care for. That principle might remain the same and be objective, but the prohibition on casual sex might change. (What dropped out was the idea that sex before marriage was sinful.)
  • Note: There is strong polling data on advisability of living together prior to marriage. Now, yes; 60 years ago, no. So cultural change itself doesn't tell you whether moral principles are changing. The consistent principle here?
  • What kind of conversation is an ethical conversation
  • Subjectivist Relativism - This position may not be held by any thoughtful person, but it sounds like what some people say when they start studying values and becomes confused or cynical.
  • The Position: "Wrong" means "I disapprove" or "my society disapproves")
  • The Problems:
  • If this sort of relativism is true, polls could determine ethics. But they don't.
  • Deep subjectivism can't making sense of disagreement. Ethics is a kind of conversation.
  • There is just too much research suggesting that "I approve" isn't philosophical "rock bottom".
  • Singer: Ok to say the values aren't objective like physics (aren't facts about the world), but not sensible to deny the meaningfulness of moral disagreement and ethical reasoning.
  • An evolutionist's twist: A society's ethical culture can produce positive, neutral, or negative outcomes for human flourishing. In this sense, values have objective consequences in meeting selection pressures (both natural and cultural). (Vax values, for example.)
  • The sorts of reasons that count as ethical: universalizable ones. Can't just appeal to one person or group's interest. Note: most standard ethical theories satisfy this requirement, yet yield different analysis and advice. We will look at the specific form of universalization in each theory we discuss, but you could say this is a kind of defining feature of ethical discourse.

Philosophical Moral Theories: Virtue Ethics

  • concepts from video...
  • Virtue — general idea of being an excellent person. Also, specific lists of virtues (vary by time and culture)
  • A bit of Aristotle’s theory of virtue and human nature: fixed nature, species eternal, proper function (telos), distinctive aspect of function: being rational and political. (Note that modern virtue theorists aren't committed to some of A's false ideas.)
  • Virtue is natural to us. Like an acorn becoming a tree. Being virtuous is being the best of the kind of thing you are. A deep intuition supports this developmental approach. (Pause to consider personal examples of the reality of moral development.)
  • Theory of the Golden Mean: Virtue as mean between extremes of emotion: Ex. Courage (story of stopping the mugger), Honesty, Generosity. (Let's give our own examples.) Virtue as training of emotional response in relation to knowledge of circumstances and the good.
  • How do you acquire virtue? Experience. Practical Wisdom cultivated through habituation. Follow a moral exemplar (virtue coach). Good parenting and shaping by healthy family. It's a training program in becoming the best human you can be based on your "telos".
  • What if we don’t want to become virtuous? What is the motivation to virtue? The pursuit of a happy life that “goes well”. Eudaimonia. Human flourishing. Challenge and development of talents. Should be attractive. Connection between virtue and happiness not guaranteed for Aristotle, but could be tighter in other versions.
  • Additional points:
  • centrality of virtues and practical wisdom. Is practical wisdom real?
  • historic variability and list of virtues. Curiosity was a vice in Medieval Europe. Check out virtue lists on Virtue Wiki.

Everyday Ethics: Thinking about Virtue in your own experience

  • Scroll through the Virtue wiki page Virtue Wiki. Notice the various list of virtues. Write down 5 that are important to you in your life right now and that you would say you are working on. Report your results with this form
  • Then, in your group discussion, identify virtues that you have made alot of progress on and ones that you are still working on. Record some of each to report back to the class.