I’m impressed by the similarities in the Buddhist ethical
views described here and those of Aristotle, who held that habits form our
moral character, as well as the existentialists, who claimed that existence
precedes essence.
“According to Buddhism, humans have free will, and in the
exercise of free will they engage in self-determination,” Damien Keown wrote in
his book Buddhism. “In a very real
sense, individuals create themselves through their moral choices. By freely and
repeatedly choosing certain sorts of things, an individual shapes his
character, and through his character his future. As the proverb has it: “Sow an
act, reap a habit; sow a habit, reap a character; sow a character, reap a
destiny.’”
“The process maybe likened to the work of a potter who molds
the clay into a finished shape: the soft clay is one’s character, and when we
make moral choices we hold ourselves in our hands and shape our natures for
good or ill.”
This tends to support the view known as “virtue ethics,”
summarized by the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy as “…a broad term for
theories that emphasize the role of character and virtue in moral philosophy
rather than either doing one’s duty or acting in order to bring about good
consequences. A virtue ethicist is likely to give you this kind of moral
advice: ‘Act as a virtuous person would act in your situation.’”
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