The Virtues of Justice: Toward a Moral and Jurisprudential Psychology

被引:1
|
作者
Williams, Christopher [1 ]
Arrigo, Bruce [2 ]
机构
[1] Bradley Univ, Coll Liberal Arts & Sci, Peoria, IL USA
[2] UNC Charlotte CLAS, 9201 Univ City Blvd, Charlotte, NC 28223 USA
关键词
virtue ethics; justice and law; human nature; crime control; offender therapy; CRIME;
D O I
10.1177/0306624X211066832
中图分类号
DF [法律]; D9 [法律];
学科分类号
0301 ;
摘要
Within the theoretical literature on crime control and offender therapy, little has been written about the importance of virtue ethics in the experience of human justice and in the evolution of the common good. As a theory of being, the aretaic tradition extols eudemonic existence (i.e., excellence, flourishing) as a relational habit of developing character that is both practiced and embodied over time. What this implies is that virtue justice depends on a set of assumptions and predispositions-both moral and jurisprudential-whose meanings are essential to comprehending its psychological structure. This article sets out to explore several themes that our integral to our thesis on the virtues (i.e., the being) of justice. We reclaim justice's aretaic significance, critique the common conflation of justice and law, discuss how the dominant legalistic conception of justice is rooted in a particular view of human nature, suggest how justice might be more properly grounded in natural moral sensibilities, and provide a tentative explication of the psychological character of justice as a twofold moral disposition. Given this exploratory commentary, we conclude by reflecting on how individual well-being, system-wide progress, and transformative social change are both possible and practical, in the interest of promoting the virtues of justice within the practice of crime control and offender therapy.
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页码:962 / 979
页数:18
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