Lindsay Lemus

9%
Flag icon
Virtue requires judgment, and judgment requires prudence. Prudence is wisdom in practice. It is the habit of discerning the “true good in every circumstance” and “the right means of achieving it.”1 In other words, it is “applied morality.”2 A person possesses the virtue of prudence when “the disposition to reason well about what courses of action and emotion will best bring about our own and others’ well-being” becomes an acquired habit.
On Reading Well: Finding the Good Life Through Great Books
Rate this book
Clear rating
Open Preview