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  1. Virtue and Risk Culture in Finance.Anthony Asher & Tracy Wilcox - 2022 - Journal of Business Ethics 179 (1):223-236.
    This article considers financial risk management practice using a virtue ethics lens, in response to ongoing critiques of risk management from within business ethics. Risk management should be seen as embedded within a complex system of cultures, organizations and regulations that are underpinned by a quantitatively reductive or ‘mechanistic’ economic paradigm, where dominant logics of self-interest, profit maximization and short-termism prevail. Building on recent work applying virtue ethics in finance, an alternative to the values, normative expectations and priorities in financial (...)
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  • Exalting the Meek Virtue of Humility in Aquinas.Sheryl Overmyer - 2015 - Heythrop Journal 56 (4):650-662.
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  • Das Ignatianische Demutsideal und Alfred Delp SJ.Godehard Brüntrup - 2020 - In Peter Kern (ed.), Alfred-Delp-Jahrbuch: Band 11-12/2020. Alfred Delp - Ein Zeugnis, Das Bleibt. Zum 75. Todestag. Lit Verlag Münster.
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  • The Puzzle of Self-Abasement: On an Adequate Concept of Humility.Ludwig Jaskolla - 2016 - Res Philosophica 93 (3):585-600.
    In this paper, I argue that the self-abasement account of humility is misguided and present Thomas Aquinas’s approach as a more adequate alternative. Starting out from the recent debate, I delineate and criticize three strategies to model humility. Contrasting these strategies, I argue that humility is best understood as a form of realistic self-insight. Following Aquinas’s ‘secunda secundae,’ I finally discuss why the proposed account is fragmentary, and should be supplemented by the concept of magnanimity.
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