imprudence - traducción al francés
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imprudence - traducción al francés

ABILITY TO GOVERN AND DISCIPLINE ONESELF BY THE USE OF REASON
Prudence principle; Prudentia; Practical judgment; Imprudence
  • Allegory of Prudence on the [[tomb of Francis II, Duke of Brittany]] The female face depicts Francis' daughter [[Anne of Brittany]].
  • [[Justice]] and Prudence window, Lindfield. Third window, south chapel, All Saints Church, Lindfield, West Sussex. Made in or after 1906 by Christopher Whall.
  • Prudentia on the tomb of [[Pope Clement II]] in the [[Bamberg Cathedral]]
  • Prudentia, detail from the 1514 monument of King Louis XII in St Denis, Paris
  • Christian God]]. On the lower left corner, Prudencia, with a book, addresses eight young women seated upon the ground. On the lower right corner, Prudencia enthroned speaks to eleven young seated women.
  • 978-0-521-32675-9}}).</ref>

imprudence      
n. imprudence, unwisdom; carelessness, indiscretion; recklessness, rashness
circonspection      
n. circumscription, prudence, wariness
prudence         
n. caution, prudence; sobering; wit, wisdom; shyness; calculation

Definición

Imprudence
·noun The quality or state of being imprudent; want to caution, circumspection, or a due regard to consequences; indiscretion; inconsideration; reshness; also, an imprudent act; as, he was guilty of an imprudence.

Wikipedia

Prudence

Prudence (Latin: prudentia, contracted from providentia meaning "seeing ahead, sagacity") is the ability to govern and discipline oneself by the use of reason. It is classically considered to be a virtue, and in particular one of the four cardinal virtues (which are, with the three theological virtues, part of the seven virtues). Prudentia is an allegorical female personification of the virtue, whose attributes are a mirror and snake, who is frequently depicted as a pair with Justitia, the Roman goddess of Justice.

The word derives from the 14th-century Old French word prudence, which, in turn, derives from the Latin prudentia meaning "foresight, sagacity". It is often associated with wisdom, insight, and knowledge. In this case, the virtue is the ability to judge between virtuous and vicious actions, not only in a general sense, but with regard to appropriate actions at a given time and place. Although prudence itself does not perform any actions, and is concerned solely with knowledge, all virtues had to be regulated by it. Distinguishing when acts are courageous, as opposed to reckless or cowardly, is an act of prudence, and for this reason it is classified as a cardinal (pivotal) virtue.

In modern English, the word has become increasingly synonymous with cautiousness. In this sense, prudence names a reluctance to take risks, which remains a virtue with respect to unnecessary risks, but, when unreasonably extended into over-cautiousness, can become the vice of cowardice.

In the Nicomachean Ethics, Aristotle gives a lengthy account of the virtue phronesis (Ancient Greek: ϕρόνησις), traditionally translated as "prudence", although this has become increasingly problematic as the word has fallen out of common usage. More recently ϕρόνησις has been translated by such terms as "practical wisdom", "practical judgment" or "rational choice".

Ejemplos de uso de imprudence
1. Son imprudence lui co$';te son honneur, et sa vie.
2. Le tortionnaire, âgé de 73 ans, vient de commettre une imprudence fatale.
3. Imprudence? «Le visage d‘une France qui change», titre le magazine qui n‘en finit pas de lécher les mocassins sarkoziens.
4. "Je trouve que la formule qu‘il a employée est tr';s ambiguë (...) Pour moi, c‘est plus qu‘une imprudence.
5. Il sagit donc dun préjudice causé ŕ autrui par maladresse, imprudence, inattention, négligence, ou inobservation des r';glements.