According to Plato he believed that in virtue ethics, which is what may be referred to as doing good, an action is only good if the person performing it is virtuous. When looking at virtue, both Aristotle and Plato defined it in reference to what was referred to as virtuous in the Greek society. They both concentrate a lot on justice, wisdom, politics, courage and happiness.
Moral virtue which is what enables a person to act sufficiently is developed partly through the upbringing or through what one is used in doing. For most Greeks and both philosophers, virtue was essential for happiness. Both philosophies talk of how to achieve this happiness but they differ in some of the ways of achieving them. Their concepts of …show more content…
According to Socrates and Plato, wisdom was the basic virtue and with it, it could unify all the other virtues. Socrates states that an unexamined life is not worth living (Apology P 23). He believes that when one fails to question life, then they will not discover what they don’t know and in turn they will not be happy. During his trial, he says that he would rather die than live a life where he did not explore what he did not know. He found his happiness from his wisdom and Plato fully agrees that wisdom is the key to human