Many leadership bloggers and “opiners” (like me) will often reference Aristotle’s description of courage as “the first virtue”. This statement is part of the debate about what critical human characteristics of our society (possible a Bill of Rights amendment, for example) are the “most” important. From my perspective, having one, and none other, seems a little light in […]
Tag Archives: judgment
Exercising Good Judgment
posted by Jeffrey Thomason
One of my new favorite blogs had a definition yesterday that really resonated with what can be the core of a leader’s daily responsibility. “Leadership….is nothing less than the repetitive exercise of discretionary judgment…”. Which leads one to think, is there a judgment muscle that can be trained or exercised or enhanced through the proper […]