Prudence
Prudence
Prudence
Eternal law
that law which is named the supreme reason & cannot be otherwise
understood than as unchangeable and eternal.
represents the divine wisdom that directs every created being to its proper
end.
made available to every Christian regardless of their native intellectual
abilities by the infused virtue of prudence
Since it allows Christians participation in the divine wisdom, they enable
them to know the truth about the moral life in accordance with the divine
Word
The heart of all morality is love, and by always following this direction,
Christians inevitably find themselves encountering Christ, who is Gods love
incarnate
- Cardinal Ratzinger (Benedict VI)
Two sources that enabled Christian moral theology to offer a full and
compelling description of prudence as a nexus (link) of knowledge and love:
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Suarezian voluntarism disregarding the important role that human
appetites play in actually effecting good conduct, while voluntaristtheories
consider a loving will enough to bring about moral integrity
Some moralist making reference to the fact that rational principles cannot
by themselves guarantee that human action will achieve true moral good
Few number of moralists maintaining that human appetites, though having
the seeds of virtue, are unable in themselves to provide a right moral
standard for human conduct
Inasmuch as the virtuous life aims to make human conduct godly, the virtue
that guides the entire moral life must be capable of shaping both the mind
and heart of the believer (Cessario, 2002)
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immediately guides the judgment of conscience about the good to be done
or to be avoided
Shapes, then, human acts in concrete situations
a prudent man must know both the universal principles of reason and the
singular about which actions are concerned (IIa-IIaeq.47, a. 3)
Prudence never secures the order of execution, the actual being-there of the
action in a similar way that conscience cannot account for making transition
from the moral mind to the real world of human activity.
How Prudence exercise its directive role in attaining the good ends?
In carrying out a good act, the believer conforms entirely to law which is an
ordination of reason for the common good. But general maxims or universal
principles do not suffice for human act. While prudence relies on the eternal
law, the prudent man must address the concrete individual case. Prudence
as a virtue ensures that a prudent person will act well in most instances. In
the case of Christian prudence, when aided by the gift of Counsel make up
for the limitations of practical reasoning through the action of the Holy Spirit.
Prudence is distinct from art, which is concerned with the good things or
artifacts a person can make. Since it is expected to produce good human
conduct, only well-tempered passion ultimately ensures that an agent who
knows the truth about moral conduct will move to achieve the good end of
moral virtues.
It is necessary that prudence must involve the formation of both the intellect
and appetites
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Prudence (as recta ratio agibilium) is particularly concerned with the actual
performance of a good act
Conscience
part of the movement of mans aspiration toward God in company with
those who seek justice (Pinckaers, 2005)
origin is the natural and primitive light of synderesis, defined by St. Thomas
as the habitus of the first principles of practical reason, a sense of good and
evil bound to the very nature of the human spirit
situated at the conjunction of the two faculties, reason and will, according
to the measure of their inclination to truth and goodness.
Synderesis
belongs to the very nature of the soul,
a light that is permanent and unchanging
function is to condemn evil and tend toward the good
gives the primary basis for our moral judgments and it cannot err
enlightens all mankind and is indestructible, regardless of the sins and
errors that veil and darken it in our hearts
original source of all judgments of conscience
(strictly speaking) the spark of conscience, the origin of the light that
illuminates conscience.
Prudence draws its wisdom from the habitus of the first principles of practical
reason (synderesis), which it applies in concrete behavior & therefore shares
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with Conscience the same source of light (Synderesis) and join in the same
work, the elaboration of moral judgment.
prudence helps the believer determine the right means to achieve a good
moral objective; prudence directs the person toward the concretization of the
good ends that make up human flourishing
Though prudence directs, this does not imply that it actually determines the
particular end or telos that formally defines each of the moral virtues
prudence according to arranges our activities which serve to reach (these
ends)The end concerns the moral virtues, not as though they appointed
the end, but because they tend out to the end which is appointed by natural
reason. In this they are helped by prudence, which prepares the way for
them, by disposing the means. Hence it follows that prudence is more
excellent than the moral virtues and moves them: yet synderesis moves
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prudence, just as the understanding of principles moves science.( IIa-IIaeq.
47, a. 6 ad. 3)
Prudence so develops the first principles that the prudent mans actions
help to attain and realize the end of the moral virtues
attainment of the end of the virtue demands more than what a simple grasp
of first principles provides; prudence constitutes a form of reasoning,
specifically, discursive reasoning to know practical truth by collecting and
appreciating all of the contingencies surrounding a particular situation
Prudence integrates right reason into human emotion; between the first
spark of synderesis and the proper act of prudence (i.e. command), the
mature moral person develops a well-defined
structure of practical reasoning
Prudent persons do not just deliberate about how to act but are moved to
action thus behaves in a virtuous way
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While imperative decision constitutes the major act of prudence, there are
three moments in the realization of a prudential act, namely,
counsel,judgment and command.
ELEMENTS OF PRUDENCE
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b) subjective parts - referring to specific types of a generic virtue or the
species of the general virtue; these represent the different species of a
cardinal virtue; as real virtues (habitus) they have the full and univocal
realization of the virtue at hand as subjective parts they fully realize the
generic definition of the moral virtue;
Integral Parts
Memory, i.e. the recalling of the past
Intellect (intuition or insight), i.e. clear knowledge of the present
Docility (teachableness), i.e. a readiness to learn
Shrewdness (sagacity, acumen), i.e. a quick conjecture regarding the
means to be used
Reason (reasoned judgment), i.e. a readiness to infer one thing from
another
Providence (foresight), i.e. a consideration of the future events
Circumspection, i.e. a careful consideration of circumstances
Caution, care in avoiding evil and obstacles
Subjective Parts
Personal (monastic) prudence which is needed to govern ones own life
Political Prudence (which enjoys a e certain excellence over individual or
personal prudence) which is required for special undertakings such as
military life or for assuming the burdens of civil
governance that is ordained to promote the common good
Potential Parts
Eubuliaor the virtue of good counsel or well-advisedness in investigation,
according to Prummer it is the habit of seeking right counsel; strengthens the
act of counsel
Synesisor judiciousness i.e. sound judgment about ordinary matters. or
according to Prummer the virtue of judging aright according to ordinary rules
Gnome or farsightedness signifying sharp sightedness or perspicacity of
judgment in the face of circumstances other than what constitutes the
normal routine
Roles of Prudence
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1.Setting a specific means or path to putting a virtuous desire into action
how to carry out a
virtuous intention
2.Determining what counts as a virtuous action given the particular situation
at hand
3.Properly balancing many diverse commitments and projects in ones life
A virtuous act attains an authentic or true moral good through the aid of
well-regulated reason while vice produces actions that are not in conformity
with the rule of right reason; consequently a definite form of evil through a
vicious action is generated either through excess or by defect
a. Imprudence
1. Precipitousness or undue haste in taking actions is contrary to good
counsel or eubulia
2. Inconsideration or thoughtlessness goes against sound judgment
3. Inconstancy and negligence weakens the persons resolve to follow
through on the command or imperium
b. Counterfeit Prudence
1. Carnal or fleshly prudence. One pursues his own disordered self-interests.
As a type of exaggerated egoism, the person with this vice looks after
created goods first and last, e.g. a miser who masters every possible way to
gain a profit; a rich person who masters every form of seduction that leads to
sexual gratification. True prudence concerns itself of course with an ordered
hierarchy of goods like maintaining a careful diet to be able to study better.
Inasmuch as there is a real lack of proportion between what the virtue (even
an infused virtue) can achieve in a person and the final end of the Christian
life that consists in beatitude, there is a need for the Gifts of the Holy Spirit.
We have died with Christ. We carry about in our bodies the sign of his
death, so that the living Christ may also be revealed in us. The life we live is
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not now our ordinary life but the life of Christ: a life of sinlessness, of
chastity, of simplicity and every other virtue.
- St. Ambrose Treatise on the Flight from the World
there are a variety of ways by which practical reason can fail to grasp or
discern the moral good:
ordinary counsel taking and deliberation that prudence needs bear with
great hardship the mixture of unsettling factors (can tilt the effective
operation of the said virtue)especially the disturbance caused by disordered
passions
Since even virtuous counsel naturally follows human reasonings standard,
the souls journey to God needs a special guidance from the Holy Spirit an
assistance that should not be construed as a bestowal of new information
like a personal revelation, rather by connaturality(Counsel develops out of
familiarity with divine things that grace gives to man)
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