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American Behavioral Scientist, Vol. 47, No. 4, 387-394 (2003)
DOI: 10.1177/0002764203256945


Introduction

Introduction

Virtue Obscured and Retrieved: Character, Community, and Practices in Behavioral Science

Blaine J. Fowers

University of Miami

Alan C. Tjeltveit

Muhlenberg College

This introduction sets the context for a discussion of the place of virtue ethics in the behavioral sciences. We outline how virtue ethics provide an illuminating account of human action that can expand social science and professional practice in ways that are unavailable in standard accounts. The authors in this issue of the American Behavioral Scientist provide a more systematic and comprehensive account of virtue than is currently available in the social science literature. This account focuses on virtues as character strengths that make it possible for individuals to seek the best kind of life. We present virtue ethics as a framework that makes it possible to break down the standard dichotomies between facts and values, individuals and society, and behavioral tendencies and a complete life. We take Aristotle’s original account of virtue as a point of departure, which reduces our reliance on particular contemporary religious or political doctrines.

Key Words: virtues • character • ethics • goodness • community


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