Rough ground of character: a philosophical investigation into character development, examining a wilderness expedition case study through a virtue ethical lens
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Abstract
There is a long-held assumption that Outdoor Adventure Education (OAE) can
develop character. However, little research has explored this belief. While many
practitioners, and some scholars, remain committed to character development
through OAE, the literature also reveals a growing body of discomfort and suspicion
surrounding this assumption. This dissent centres on the vague nature of the term
“character,” and the moral philosophical complexities surrounding the concept of
character itself. Until “character” is more clearly explicated, any resolution to the
current confusion is unlikely.
This thesis employs Aristotle’s virtue theory, as espoused in his Nicomachean
Ethics, to articulate an understanding of character. Although several scholars have
used virtue ethics, commonly referred to as character ethics, to support their claims
of character development through OAE, these treatments have been preliminary,
warranting this more detailed account.
When viewed from this virtue ethical perspective, the question, “Can character be
developed through OAE?,” becomes problematic. For Aristotle cautions that
different subjects of inquiry yield differing levels of accuracy, and with regard to
ethical investigations, such as those into character, one must be content to “indicate
the truth roughly and in outline” (I 3§4). Further complicating the matter, Aristotle
asserts that virtue, a disposition, and the building block of character is gradually and
arduously inculcated over long periods of time (I 7§16).
While virtue theory implies that radical character transformation is, in any context,
unlikely over brief stints of time, this does not mean that OAE programmes are of
little moral worth. To the contrary, a detailed examination into a virtue ethical
understanding of character suggests that certain elements of OAE programmes may
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have strong moral relevance. This relevance is found in Aristotle’s three conditions
that cultivate the development of virtue, conditions readily found within many OAE
courses: moral reflection; moral practice; and sharing in the moral lives of others.
Drawing on my own interest and experience within OAE, an expedition seemed an
ideal setting to explore the presence and content of Aristotle’s three conditions. In
hope of discovering this moral narrative, a qualitative case study was conducted on a
two-week wilderness expedition in the Adirondack Mountains of New York. The
expedition was a first-year transition experience for students attending a Christian
liberal college in the United States. Utilising interviews as a primary method, and
observations and texts as secondary methods, the research explored the participants’
expedition experience from a virtue ethical perspective.
A thematic analysis revealed that participants reported reflecting on their moral lives
in both formal (e.g. group reviews, solo, journals) and informal (e.g. while hiking
and performing camp chores) settings. Similarly, whether through the mental and
physical endurance required in off-trail navigation, or the care expressed through the
acts of service and gracious tolerance necessitated by the social demands of
expeditionary life, the participants viewed their wilderness travel as a constant
opportunity for moral practice. Lastly, the participants identified the community
formed on their expedition to be integral to their increased moral self-perception.
Although a virtue ethical perspective precludes claiming anything definitive
regarding the participants’ character development, at the least, the expedition can be
said to have contributed to their moral journey in ways that are directly relevant to
their character.
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