CONCEPT
Phronesis (Nonaka's Reading)
Nonaka's late-career retrieval of
Aristotle's practical wisdom as the highest form of organizational knowledge — the capacity to perceive what a particular, unrepeatable situation requires, distinguished from both theoretical knowledge (episteme) and productive skill (techne), and structurally unavailable to AI.
In 2011, Nonaka and Hirotaka Takeuchi published 'The Wise Leader' in the
Harvard Business Review, arguing that what distinguishes great leaders from merely competent ones is not superior
theoretical knowledge or technical skill but
phronesis — the Aristotelian virtue of practical wisdom. The wise leader, in Nonaka's account, possesses six capabilities: the ability to judge goodness, to grasp the essence of particular situations, to create shared contexts for knowledge creation, to communicate essence through metaphor and narrative, to exercise political judgment in the use of power, and to foster practical wisdom in others. Every one of these capabilities is tacit, situational, and dependent on embodied experience accumulated through decades of engaged practice. AI provides
episteme at scale Aristotle could not have imagined. It provides
techne with a competence that transforms what individuals can produce. It does not provide
phronesis, and the gap is not a technical limitation to be resolved by larger models.