A philosophical perspective is a reasoned, justified view on a philosophical question — not merely a personal opinion. VCAA requires students to develop their own perspectives, meaning:
- The perspective must be supported by premises and reasons
- It must engage with the set texts and relevant thinkers
- It must acknowledge objections and respond to them
- It must be formulated in precise philosophical language
A perspective is not a guess, a feeling, or a summary of someone else’s view. It is an argument you are prepared to defend.
| Feature | What It Looks Like |
|---|---|
| Clear thesis | “I argue that the good life centrally involves virtue friendship, because…” |
| Supporting premises | Two or three reasons why the thesis is true |
| Engagement with objections | Acknowledge the strongest counter-argument and respond |
| Precise language | Use defined terms correctly (e.g., eudaimonia, not just “happiness”) |
| Grounding in thinkers | Show how your view builds on, extends, or departs from set text positions |
Example perspective: Self-discipline is not merely a tool for achieving pleasure but is partly constitutive of the good life — a person who can only experience pleasure when everything goes well lacks the resilience and self-possession that a genuinely good life requires.
VCAA FOCUS: A perspective does not have to resolve the question definitively. It can be nuanced — “pleasure and virtue are both necessary, but neither is sufficient on its own.”
Example perspective: Aristotle’s account of happiness as eudaimonia (activity in accordance with virtue) is more defensible than Mill’s hedonic account because it explains why we judge some pleasant lives as not truly good.
Example perspective: Virtue friendship is necessary for a fully good life, but it need not be limited to the narrow Aristotelian model; care relationships that involve vulnerability and dependency are also constitutive of flourishing.
Example perspective: Genuine freedom requires social conditions for its exercise — an account of authenticity that ignores whether those conditions exist is philosophically incomplete.
Structure for a perspective response:
VCAA rewards precision. Use these phrases:
- “I contend that…” / “My perspective is that…”
- “This premise is more plausible than [rival’s] because…”
- “While [thinker X] argues…, I find this unconvincing on the grounds that…”
- “A more defensible position is…”
EXAM TIP: Your perspective does not have to align with any single thinker. You can draw on multiple positions, synthesise them, or construct a genuinely novel position — as long as it is argued, not merely asserted.
COMMON MISTAKE: Ending an essay with “In conclusion, there are many different views on this question” is not a perspective. A perspective takes a stance.
REMEMBER: Developing a perspective requires intellectual courage — you must say what you think, defend it, and acknowledge its limits. This is the philosophical skill VCAA is assessing.