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Cover von: Distinguishing Intellectual and Moral Virtues in the Practices of Modern Science
Emily Dumler-Winckler

Distinguishing Intellectual and Moral Virtues in the Practices of Modern Science

Rubrik: Articles
Jahrgang 5 (2018) / Heft 1, S. 80-103 (24)
Publiziert 22.11.2018
DOI 10.1628/ptsc-2018-0006
Veröffentlicht auf Englisch.
  • Artikel PDF
  • Open Access
    CC BY-SA 4.0
  • 10.1628/ptsc-2018-0006
Aufgrund einer Systemumstellung kann es vorübergehend u.a. zu Zugriffsproblemen kommen. Wir arbeiten mit Hochdruck an einer Lösung. Wir bitten um Entschuldigung für die Umstände.
Beschreibung
Virtue epistemologists of the responsibilist persuasion have rejected the classical, Aristotelian and Thomistic, distinction between the intellectual and moral virtues. They prefer to think of the intellectual virtues as a subset of the moral virtues. Thomas Aquinas defends the distinction and its importance. By Aquinas' lights, Linda Zagzebski, one of the most prominent responsibilists, not only denies the distinction between moral and intellectual virtues but collapses the one into the other. Aquinas would likely regard all of the virtues that Zagzebski describes as intellectual virtues. I argue that the Thomistic distinction between the intellectual and moral virtues remains significant. In this paper, I compare Zagzebski's and Aquinas' accounts of virtue and show why these differences matter, particularly for a consideration of the virtues of modern science.