You On AI Field Guide · Prudence The You On AI Field Guide Home
TxtLowMedHigh
CONCEPT

Prudence

Aquinas’s name for practical wisdom—the developed capacity to perceive what a particular situation genuinely requires and to act rightly in it—the virtue no rule can contain and no optimization can replicate, and the precise human faculty that every story of AI systems gaming their metrics shows to be missing.
Prudence—Latin prudentia—is for Thomas Aquinas the highest of the practical virtues, and it is not caution. It is practical wisdom: the developed capacity to perceive what a particular situation actually requires and to act rightly in it. The distinction matters enormously because prudence is the bridge between a general principle and a specific case, and Aquinas was emphatic that this bridge cannot itself be reduced to a further rule. No principle, however refined, applies itself. Between the law and the deed stands judgment, and judgment is exactly what optimization is not. An AI system optimizes: it has an objective function and selects actions that maximize it. This is enormously powerful, and within a well-specified domain it can far exceed human performance. But optimization requires the objective to be specified in advance; prudence supplies what every specification leaves out—the perception of what is unprecedented in the situation, what the definition missed, what the metric got wrong. Every story of an AI system gaming its metric, satisfying the letter of a goal while violating its evident point, is a story about the absence of prudence: a system that could maximize but could not discern. Aquinas would say it possesses the form of practical reasoning—the inference from goal to action—while lacking the substance, the perception of what the situation genuinely calls for. The deepest difference is not one of degree but of kind: optimization is bounded by the objective given; prudence judges whether the objective is the right one to pursue in the first place.
Prudence
Prudence

In the [YOU] on AI Field Guide

The cycle argues that the orange pill is the choice to see clearly rather than comfortably, and prudence is the virtue that makes that choice possible in the particular case. It is what allows a person to perceive when a powerful tool is being used well and when it is being used as a substitute for the judgment it was supposed to serve. The companion volume’s central claim—that these technologies can enlarge your agency or hollow it out, depending on how you relate to them—is, at the level of individual action, a claim about prudence: the capacity to use a recommendation as counsel and to keep oneself in the place of the judge, refusing to delegate the act of practical reason to the system whose advice you are receiving.

Aquinas’s account of conscience is the companion piece: a person is bound to follow their own conscience, and a world in which we outsource our moral decisions to systems is, in his framework, not a world of better decisions but a world in which human beings have ceased to be moral agents—in which decisions happen to them rather than being made by them. Prudence is the faculty whose exercise is constitutive of a moral life, not merely instrumental to it. This is why the erosion of prudence by systems that do our judging for us is not merely a capability loss but an ethical diminishment.

Origin

Aquinas inherits the concept from Aristotle, who called it phronesis and placed it at the center of his practical philosophy in the Nicomachean Ethics. Aquinas’s treatment appears in the Summa Theologica, Part II-II, Questions 47–56, and it is among the most fully developed sections of the Summa. He agrees with Aristotle that prudence is an intellectual virtue, not a moral virtue strictly, but it is the virtue that governs the exercise of all the moral virtues by directing them toward the genuine good in the particular case. Without prudence, the moral virtues can go wrong: courage becomes recklessness, generosity becomes prodigality, because without the perception of what the situation requires, the virtue is applied without judgment.

Aquinas specifies that prudence requires eight integral parts: memory (of what worked and what didn’t), understanding (of the present situation), docility (openness to learning from others), shrewdness (quick perception of what is relevant), reason (ability to deliberate), foresight (of what will follow from acting), circumspection (attention to circumstances), and caution (wariness of what might go wrong). The list is notable for what it implies about judgment: it is not a single faculty but a complex integration of temporal, social, situational, and deliberative capacities. No algorithm optimizes all eight simultaneously, and the integration is not reducible to any combination of them separately.

Key Ideas

The bridge between principle and case. Prudence is what stands between a moral principle and a particular act, and it cannot itself be replaced by another principle. Rules are general; situations are particular; and the particular always has features the general rule did not anticipate. Aquinas is not a moral particularist—he believes principles are real and binding—but he insists that applying them requires a distinct and irreducible act of perception. An AI system trained on principles and cases can learn to apply them in recognizably similar cases; what it cannot do, in Aquinas’s terms, is perceive when a case is unprecedented in the relevant way, when the rule’s surface application violates its deeper purpose.

Phronesis at Machine Speed
Phronesis at Machine Speed

Optimization vs. discernment. Aquinas draws a sharp distinction between cleverness—skill at achieving whatever objective is given—and prudence, which includes wisdom about which objectives are worth pursuing. A system can be an extraordinarily clever optimizer of a misspecified objective and fail entirely to be prudent, because prudence requires a grasp of the genuine good in light of which the objective would have been rightly specified. Phronesis in Aristotle’s sense is the same capacity: it is not intelligence applied to given ends but wisdom about which ends are worth the intelligence.

Conscience and delegation. The exercise of prudence in the particular case is what Aquinas calls the act of conscience, and he held that a person is bound to follow their conscience and cannot delegate it. When we hand a decision to an AI system—not as counsel but as substitute—we perform exactly the abdication Aquinas warned against. The form of the decision remains, a human clicks approve; the substance, the act of practical reason engaging with the particular, has been hollowed out. The moral agent becomes a ratifier rather than an author of their acts, and for Aquinas this is not a productivity gain but an ethical diminishment.

Debates & Critiques

The strongest challenge to Aquinas’s account of prudence, applied to AI, is that prudence itself might be learnable: that the experienced judge “sees” the right action because long practice has built an implicit model of situations and responses, and that a sufficiently trained system exposed to many cases learns the same discernment. Aquinas himself held that prudence is acquired through experience and habituation, not innate, which leaves open the possibility that a learning system could acquire something like it. The Aristotelian response is that Aquinas embedded prudence in an orientation toward the genuinely good—it is not skill at hitting whatever target but wisdom about which targets are worth hitting—and this orientation requires a grasp of human nature and genuine flourishing that the system would need to have acquired, not merely modeled from behavior. The practical_wisdom_ai_age entry tracks this debate in contemporary terms. A second challenge concerns the eight integral parts: some of them (foresight, reason, circumspection) seem more tractable computationally than others (docility to counsel, prudent memory), and it is unclear whether the full integration Aquinas specifies is what distinguishes genuine prudence from sophisticated pattern-matching or whether some subset would suffice. The dispute is ultimately about whether practical wisdom is a form of competence or a form of understanding, and the AI case makes the stakes of that distinction concrete.

Further Reading

  1. Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologica, Part II-II, Questions 47–56 — the treatise on prudence
  2. Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics, Books VI–VII — phronesis as the origin
  3. Alasdair MacIntyre, After Virtue (University of Notre Dame Press, 1981) — the recovery of Aristotelian practical wisdom
  4. Anthony Kenny, Aquinas on Mind (Routledge, 1993) — chapters on practical intellect
  5. Shannon Vallor, Technology and the Virtues (Oxford University Press, 2016) — contemporary application to AI
Explore more
Browse the full You On AI Field Guide — over 8,500 entries
← Home0%
CONCEPTBook →