Using these difficult virtues as springboards and extrapolating from some of Aristotle's remarks, Curzer codifies some standard features of Aristotelian virtues, and speculatively suggests additional features to enhance the descriptive and prescriptive power of Aristotelian virtue ethics. Thus, Curzer adds to the standard list of Aristotelian virtues and to the standard list of features that make virtues Aristotelian.
Each difficult virtue is different, but certain themes thread through all of them: self-construction, social critique, and significant creation. Curzer's accounts of these virtues illuminate the ways people forge their own identities, struggle to acquire virtue despite disadvantage, and produce and appreciate novelty.
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