Virtues/Good Faith

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Introduction

Good faith is the virtue of truthfulness. You might call it sincerity, truthfulness, honesty, veracity, candor, or authenticity, the particular word chosen is less important than the deep respect for the truth they each convey. Truth is correspondence with reality. Good faith requires our acts and our words to agree with our inner life.[1] Good faith is the opposite of mendacity, hypocrisy, duplicity, and other forms of bad faith both publicly and privately. Good faith requires first that you be honest with yourself. Good faith desires truth.

While good faith does allow for errors, it does not tolerate any intent to deceive.

Promote both truth and grace. There are times when balancing compassion and gentleness with truth it becomes prudent to say less. There is no good reason to tell your grandmother she looks old. Consider carefully what you tell a dying person about their condition. Neither exhibitionism nor tactlessness are virtues.

Truth departs from good faith whenever literal truths are used to send a false message. This can be done by establishing a narrow perspective, then taking quotations out of context, or overgeneralizing from anecdotal evidence rather than using systematic evidence. If the intent is to deceive, it cannot be good will.

Philosophers have disagreed somewhat on the relative priority of truth and justice. An example used to illustrate this dilemma is called the murderer at the door.[2] Suppose an innocent friend is a guest at your house. A known murder then appears at the door asking: “Is your friend here? I have come here to kill him.” Do you tell the murderer the truth and risk the death of your innocent friend, or do you deceive the murder to preserve justice? Kant believes that lying is prohibited in all cases because it violates a categorical moral imperative. Many other philosophers believe that justice takes priority in this example. Casuistry is a method of reasoning used to resolve moral dilemmas. It can become a slippery slope if used to defend deceit in the absence of good faith.

Do not let some absolute interpretation of truth devolve into some form of detached literalism or fanaticism. Keep the good in good faith.

Good faith is at its best when it is combined with justice, prudence, courage, generosity, humility, simplicity, and love.

While lying is not a virtue, neither is foolishness or suicide. [3]

While it is sometimes prudent to withhold the truth in certain circumstances when talking with others, it is not legitimate to lie to yourself. It is better to know you are evil than to pretend you are good.

The Virtue of Good Faith

Good faith is a virtue because bad faith is not. Virtue can only be built from pillars of truth. Truth is considered the foremost virtue of intellectuals and philosophers.

Everyday Good Faith

Practice the virtue of good faith every day in these various ways:

Assignment

Part 1:

Part 2: How do you decide what is true? Study this essay on the theory of knowledge or complete the course Knowing How You Know. Write down your own theory of knowledge, analogous to this example. Know how you know. Use this increased confidence in what you know to strengthen your good faith.

References

  1. Comte-Sponville, André (2002). A Small Treatise on the Great Virtues: The Uses of Philosophy in Everyday Life. Picador. pp. 368. ISBN 978-0805045567.
  2. See, for example, Lying, Deception and Kant, Alexander R. Pruss, August 30, 2001
  3. From Comte-Sponville, André (2002). A Small Treatise on the Great Virtues: The Uses of Philosophy in Everyday Life. Picador. pp. 368. ISBN 978-0805045567., attributed to Spinoza, The Ethics
  4. Ruiz, Don Miguel (1997). The Four Agreements: A Practical Guide to Personal Freedom. Amber-Allen Publishing. pp. 138. ISBN 978-1878424310.

Further Reading

Students interested in learning more about good faith may be interested in the following materials:

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