Abstract
This paper explores the value of benevolence as a cardinal virtue by
analyzing the evolving history of virtue ethics from ancient Greek
tradition to emotivism and contemporary thoughts. First, I would like to
start with a brief idea of virtue ethics. Greek virtue theorists recognize
four qualities of moral character, namely, wisdom, temperance, courage,
and justice. Christianity recognizes unconditional love as the essence of
its theology. Here I will analyze the transition within the doctrine of virtue
ethics in the Christian era and afterward since the eighteenth-century
thinkers are immensely inspired by this Christian notion of love consider
universal benevolence as the cardinal virtue. Later, Hume introduces an
emotivist turn by considering the moral worth of sympathetic emotions in
his ethical doctrine. In this paper, I aim to discover the cardinality of the
virtue of benevolence following the evolutionary history of virtue ethics.