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    The good of practical reasonableness (bonum rationis) is ... — Carmelics
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    Home/Moral Responsibility
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    Supports→Practical reasonableness (prudentia) governs and shapes all the virtues.

    The good of practical reasonableness (bonum rationis) is the governing and shaping principle of virtuous action.

    Moral ResponsibilityVirtue Ethics
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    Moral ResponsibilityVirtue Ethics

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    Practical reasonableness (prudentia) governs and shapes all the virtues.Prudentia is both an intellectual and a moral virtue that directs the other virt...

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    Practical reasonableness (prudentia) governs and shapes all the virtue...83%The mean of reasonableness is determined by someone of true virtue ass...78%Our conception of practical rationality must fit within our overall co...76%Morality is grounded in pure practical reason, and moral actions are b...76%

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    Aquinas firmly holds the Platonic-Aristotelian theses (i) of the connexio virtutum: that to have any of the virtues in its full and proper form one must have all of them, and (ii) of the governing and shaping role of (the good of) practical reasonableness (bonum rationis), that is, of the intellectual and moral virtue of prudentia. For some indication why, see 4.4 below..

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