Preface
1: Introduction
2: Virtue, Character, and Disposition
3: Skilled and Virtuous Action
4: The Scope of Virtue
5: Virtue and Enjoyment
6: Virtues and the Unity of Virtue
7: Virtue and Goodness
8: Living Happily
9: Living Virtuously, Living Happily
10: Conclusion
Julia Annas has taught at the University of Arizona since 1986.
Before that she taught at the University of Oxford (St Hugh's
College) and she has also taught at Columbia University. She is a
member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and an Honorary
Fellow of St Hugh's College, Oxford. She has been a Senior Fellow
of the Center for Hellenic Studies, Washington DC and President of
the Pacific Division of the American Philosophical Association
2004-5, and
has an honorary doctorate from the University of Uppsala. Annas has
written a number of books and articles over a wide range of ancient
philosophy, from Plato to the Hellenistic period, including An
Introduction to Plato's Republic (1981), The Morality of Happiness
(1993), and Platonic Ethics Old and New (1999). She is now working
on virtue and law in ancient thought.
Intelligent Virtue is engaging, stimulating, and suggestive. Anyone
interested in eudaimonist virtue approaches to ethics will be
rewarded by giving it a careful readespecially critics, whose
arguments against such approaches are often off-target. A careful,
attentive, and sympathetic read of Intelligent Virtue will not only
be rewarding for its own sake, but will help critics formulate more
appropriate criticisms of eudaimonist virtue approaches.
*Anne Baril, Mind*
written with such lucid simplicity that any reader of the TLS who
has been sufficiently interested to read this far should find it
enjoyable, instructive and inspiring
*Rosalind Hursthouse, Times Literary Supplement*
an attractive account both of what virtue is and how it is
connected to happiness and the good. The Aristotelian picture Annas
provides is appealing in its own right, and because of its clarity
and accessibility is also especially useful as an introduction to
virtue and eudaimonism for those who teach about ethics
*Erica Lucast Stonestreet, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews*
With direct and simple prose, and a refreshingly unpretentious tone
... the connections Annas forges between virtue and happiness
(eudaimonia) are fascinating ... Intelligent Virtue is all the more
worth reading precisely because it does invite us to engage in a
critical dialogue with the themes and ideas it proffers. Let us
then recline in comfort, open a bottle of fine Italian and be part
of the conversation. Bene Vita!
*Brian K. Cameron, Philosophy in Review*
essential reading for anyone interested in defending (or
criticizing) eudaimonist, virtue-centered ethical theories ... is
sure to set the agenda for the development of such theories in the
years to come. ... Intelligent Virtue is engaging, stimulating, and
suggestive. Anyone interested in eudaimonist virtue apporaches to
ethics will be rewarded by giving it a careful read - especially
critics, whose arguments against such approaches are often
off-target. A careful, attentive, and sympathetic read of
Intelligent Virtue will not only be rewarding for its own sake, but
will help critics formulate more appropriate criticisms of
eudaimonist virtue approaches.
*Anne Baril, Mind*
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