Wholeheartedly agree that having the capacity to cause good outcomes is important. I’m not sure it’s part of being a good person. Let’s say you have two people. Both have the same personal amount of Wisdom and Courage. Both choose to do good. One person is born poor and the other is born with 100 billion dollars in inheritance. The richer person is undoubtedly more powerful and can do more good but does that mean they’re a better person?
Maybe “ability” or some other word is better here than power. For me power implies being able to force other agents to do/not do things. Ability suggests being able to do something, even when that something doesn’t involve other agents.
I do think pursuing opportunities to increase your capacity to do good is an important part of being good as a person. Ability works too, definitely, as in my book power is not much more than ability to carry out an action, whatever that may be. A transition that is possible to you, but maybe not others.
I suppose I would also swap the binary idea of being or not being a good person, for a continuous measure of “goodness”. In fact, instead of saying that a person is good or bad to some degree, I think it makes sense to evaluate the morality of each act individually—how good or bad was that act of yours? As all people carry out good and bad acts each day.
And if we evaluate the moral value of acts, then having an ability to carry out these acts in the first place becomes even more important. We are all born under different circumstances, with different abilities. But it is also true for many of us (perhaps most) that we can develop ourselves, increase our capacity to help others.
Wholeheartedly agree that having the capacity to cause good outcomes is important. I’m not sure it’s part of being a good person. Let’s say you have two people. Both have the same personal amount of Wisdom and Courage. Both choose to do good. One person is born poor and the other is born with 100 billion dollars in inheritance. The richer person is undoubtedly more powerful and can do more good but does that mean they’re a better person?
Maybe “ability” or some other word is better here than power. For me power implies being able to force other agents to do/not do things. Ability suggests being able to do something, even when that something doesn’t involve other agents.
I do think pursuing opportunities to increase your capacity to do good is an important part of being good as a person. Ability works too, definitely, as in my book power is not much more than ability to carry out an action, whatever that may be. A transition that is possible to you, but maybe not others.
I suppose I would also swap the binary idea of being or not being a good person, for a continuous measure of “goodness”. In fact, instead of saying that a person is good or bad to some degree, I think it makes sense to evaluate the morality of each act individually—how good or bad was that act of yours? As all people carry out good and bad acts each day.
And if we evaluate the moral value of acts, then having an ability to carry out these acts in the first place becomes even more important. We are all born under different circumstances, with different abilities. But it is also true for many of us (perhaps most) that we can develop ourselves, increase our capacity to help others.