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In search of a fitting moral psychology for practical wisdom: Exploring a missing link in virtuous management
Author(s) -
Akrivou Kleio,
Scalzo Germán
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
business ethics: a european review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.343
H-Index - 35
eISSN - 1467-8608
pISSN - 0962-8770
DOI - 10.1111/beer.12295
Subject(s) - virtue ethics , moral agency , virtue , conversation , agency (philosophy) , perspective (graphical) , business ethics , action (physics) , moral psychology , epistemology , sociology , moral disengagement , philosophy of business , practical wisdom , management , social science , computer science , law , political science , philosophy , business model , physics , communication , quantum mechanics , artificial intelligence , economics
While business as a social activity has involved communities of persons embedded in dense relational networks and practices for thousands of years, the modern legal, theoretical psychological, and moral foundations of business have progressively narrowed our understanding of practical wisdom. Although practical wisdom has recently regained ground in business ethics and management studies, thanks mainly to Anscombe's recovery of virtue ethics, Anscombe herself once observed that it lacks, and has even neglected, a moral psychology that genuinely complements the nuanced philosophical perspective of a virtue‐centered moral philosophy. Herein, we offer one way to fill this gap by suggesting two opposing psychological paradigms, namely the inter‐processual self and the autonomous self, which are classified according to the assumptions they make about the self, human agency and action more broadly, as well as how they relate to practical wisdom. Upon presenting these moral psychologies, we will bring this proposal into conversation with business ethics to show how the IPS paradigm can enable and support virtuous management.

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