Útdráttur
This article has two aims. First, to offer a critical review of the literatures on two well-known single-component solutions to the problem of a gap between moral knowledge and moral action: moral identity and moral emotions. Second, to take seriously the rising interest in Aristotle-inspired virtue ethics and character development within the social sciences: approaches that seem to assume that the development of phronesis (practical wisdom) bridges the gap in question. Since phronesis is a multicomponent construct, the latter part of this article offers an overview of what those different components would be, as a necessary precursor to operationalising them if the phronesis hypothesis were to be subjected to empirical scrutiny. The idea of a neo-Aristotelian multicomponent solution to the "gappiness problem" invites comparisons with another multicomponent candidate, the neo-Kohlbergian four-component model, with which it shares at least surface similarities. Some space is thus devoted to the proposed theoretical uniqueness of a phronesis-based multicomponent model vis-à-vis the neo-Kohlbergian one. Our main conclusion is that - weaknesses in its developmental psychological grounding notwithstanding - operationalising the phronesis model for the purposes of instrument design and empirical inquiry would be a feasible and potentially productive enterprise.
| Upprunalegt tungumál | Enska |
|---|---|
| Síður (frá-til) | 101-129 |
| Síðufjöldi | 29 |
| Fræðitímarit | Human Development |
| Bindi | 62 |
| Númer tölublaðs | 3 |
| DOI | |
| Útgáfustaða | Útgefið - 1 jún. 2019 |
Athugasemd
Publisher Copyright: © 2019 S. Karger AG, Basel. All rights reserved.Fingerprint
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