- Summum bonum
Summum bonum (
Latin for the highest good) is an expression used inphilosophy , particularly inmedieval philosophy , to describe theultimate importance , the singular and most ultimate end which human beings ought to pursue. The "summum bonum" is generally thought of as being an end in itself, and at the same time containing all other goods. In Christian philosophy, the highest good is usually defined as the life of the righteous, the life led in Communion withGod and according to God's precepts.The concept, as well as the philosophical and theological consequences drawn from the purported existence of a more or less clearly defined "summum bonum", could be traced back to the earliest forms of
monotheism : for instance,Zoroastrianism andJudaism . In the Western world, the concept was introduced by the neoplatonic philosophers, and described as a feature of the Christian God by Saint Augustine in "De natura boni" ("On the Nature of Good", written "circa"399 ). Augustine denies the positive existence of absoluteevil , describing a world withGod as the supreme good at the center, and defining different grades of evil as different stages of remoteness from that center.Experience soon teaches that all desires cannot be satisfied, that they are conflicting, and that some goods must be foregone in order to secure others. Hence the necessity of weighing the relative value of goods, of classifying them, and of ascertaining which of them must be procured at the loss of others. The result is the division of goods into two great classes, the physical and the moral, happiness and virtue. Within either class it is comparatively easy to determine the relation of particular good things to one another, but it has proved far more difficult to fix the relative excellence of the two classes of virtue and happiness. If happiness and virtue are mutually exclusive, we have to choose between the two, and this choice is a momentous one. But their incompatibility may be only on the surface. Indeed the hope is ever recurring that the sovereign good includes both, and that there is some way of reconciling them.
ummum bonum and judgments
Judgments on the highest good have generally fallen into three categories:
*Eudaemonism orUtilitarianism , when the highest good is identified with happiness;
* RationalDeontologism , when the highest good is identified withvirtue or duty;
* Rational Eudæmonism, or tempered Deontologism, when both virtue and happiness are combined in the highest good.ee also
*
Omnibenevolence
*Intrinsic value (ethics)
*Meaning of life External links
* [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/06640a.htm "Catholic Encyclopedia" "The Highest Good"]
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