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As an introduction to Catholic ethics, I really enjoy this lecture. Topics covered include the human will, cardinal virtue, the distinction between moral and intellectual virtues, the struggle with passions, and also the Golden Mean.

In particular, pay attention to the segment that begins shortly after the half-hour mark. Any virtue can become vicious if it is not balanced with all other virtues. Generosity, as charity, can quickly act viciously to one's own well-being such that it compromises your ability to approach all other forms of virtue, hence, the Golden Mean. The picture this creates is like a kind of dynamic stability, where one cannot perfect any virtue individually where he is not effecting the perfection of all other virtues - to consummate one, is to consummate all. Virtue involves skill and intellect. The matter is not simply a case of adhering to arbitrary rule-sets; rather, these are a perfection of habits which are necessary to a person's ability to grow, to adapt, to become more skilled, more attractive...really, more like the ideal human, more like Christ, more like God.

Virtue is what balances the order of nature with the order of grace, or in other words, the animal with the Man.

As an introduction to Catholic ethics, I really enjoy this lecture. Topics covered include the human will, cardinal virtue, the distinction between moral and intellectual virtues, the struggle with passions, and also the Golden Mean. In particular, pay attention to the segment that begins shortly after the half-hour mark. Any virtue can become vicious if it is not balanced with all other virtues. Generosity, as charity, can quickly act viciously to one's own well-being such that it compromises your ability to approach all other forms of virtue, hence, the Golden Mean. The picture this creates is like a kind of dynamic stability, where one cannot perfect any virtue individually where he is not effecting the perfection of all other virtues - to consummate one, is to consummate all. Virtue involves skill and intellect. The matter is not simply a case of adhering to arbitrary rule-sets; rather, these are a perfection of habits which are necessary to a person's ability to grow, to adapt, to become more skilled, more attractive...really, more like the ideal human, more like Christ, more like God. Virtue is what balances the order of nature with the order of grace, or in other words, the animal with the Man.

(post is archived)

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Lectures are great for background noise; interesting points will be absorbed.

And refreshing my knowledge is always a good thing. It's been a while since I've read Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics so maybe I will be reminded of some of the interesting excess-virtue-deficiency examples - like how with good humour there is buffoonery and prudishness.

I can't remember if I mentioned this to you - I think I mentioned it to @ARM once when he said Christianity contains no meaningful symbolism - but Christ being crucified between two thieves is a representation of the Golden Mean.

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when he said Christianity contains no meaningful symbolism

I don't remember saying that.

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It was part of your attempts to argue Hinduism's superiority. Something about how Maya sits on Dharma or something, and how totally deep that is compared to anything in Christianity. I think you were speaking of Christianity as conceived by the world rather than Christianity as I hope you now at least recognize it is.

@CHIRO

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https://searchvoat.co/?st=comments&t=kali&u=antiracistmetal

I don't think I said Christianity is without symbolism.

I think I said that what people take to be a fanciful polytheism is actually just a means of providing ontological lessons.

@Chiro