Virtudes intelectuales en Aristóteles para el perfeccionamiento de los actos verdaderos

Translated title of the contribution: Intellectual virtues in Aristotle for the improvement of true acts

Luis Fernando Garcés Giraldo, Conrado Giraldo Zuluaga

Research output: Contribution to journalOriginal Articlepeer-review

6 Scopus citations

Abstract

Aristotelian virtue is a way through which a man becomes a good being and acts according to that virtue. The actions performed will be, then, nice, good and beautiful. The virtuous man, for Aristotle, is the one who judges correctly, and that fact is the base for good living and acting, thus giving happiness to those who practice that virtue. The intellectual virtues in Aristotle are those that accompany the reason and, given the fact they have that reason, virtues govern the soul and prepare it for bringing perfection to true acts. The provisions because of which soul has the truth are: art, science, prudence, wisdom and intellect. This reflection is about art (téchne), prudence (phrónesis) and wisdom (sophía) because those are the virtues that, as they are included in the moral work of Aristotle, will help us to build a bioethical framework for experimenting with animals.

Translated title of the contributionIntellectual virtues in Aristotle for the improvement of true acts
Original languageSpanish
Pages (from-to)221-241
Number of pages21
JournalDiscusiones Filosoficas
Volume15
Issue number24
StateIndexed - 2014
Externally publishedYes

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