The relative role of the intellectual and moral virtues in sustainable management decisions: The case of practical wisdom and justice
Keywords: 
Justice
Fairness
Virtue ethics
Practical wisdom
Issue Date: 
2020
Publisher: 
MDPI AG
ISSN: 
2071-1050
Note: 
This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Citation: 
Cugueró-Escofet, N. (Natàlia); Rosanas-Martí, J.M. (Josep Maria). "The relative role of the intellectual and moral virtues in sustainable management decisions: The case of practical wisdom and justice". Sustainability. 12 (3), 2020, 1156
Abstract
We analyze the status of virtues in management by going in some depth into the two main virtues, justice and practical wisdom. We next study how ethics requires that all virtues should be present under the ideal concept of a ‘unity of virtues’ for a completely wise person and discuss the practical limitations of this concept. Then, we draw a framework for decision making depending on whether the decision maker possesses justice and practical wisdom or lacks one of them and then discuss which one is better to have. We conclude that justice is more important, as it is about setting objectives and prioritizing, whereas practical wisdom is about attaining these objectives, once listed, in a rationally wise and contextual way. Hence, we conclude that objectives (justice) must come first, because this makes it more likely that, in the end, practical wisdom is developed, and thus we end up having the two virtues
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