Friday, July 15, 2011

What is Integrity?

Integrity is among the most significant and oft-cited of virtue terms. It's also perhaps the most getting. For representative, while it's sometimes used virtually synonymously with 'moral,' we also on occasion distinguish acting morally from acting with integrity. Persons of integrity may in truth act immorally-though they'd usually not know they're acting immorally. Thus one may acknowledge a person to have integrity even though that person may hold importantly mistaken moral views.

When used as a virtue term, 'integrity' refers to a quality of a person's character; however, there are other uses of the term. One may speak of the integrity of a wilderness region or an ecosystem, a computerized database, a defense scheme, a work of art, and so forth. When it's applied to objects, integrity refers to the wholeness, intactness or purity of a thing-meanings that are sometimes carried concluded when it's applied to people. A wilderness region has integrity when it causes not been corrupted by growing or by the side-effects of development, when it remains intact as wilderness. A database maintains its integrity as long as it remains uncorrupted by error; a defense scheme as long as it is not breached. A musical work could be said to have integrity when its musical structure has a certain completeness that represents not intruded upon by uncoordinated, unrelated musical ideas; that's, when it possesses a rather musical wholeness, intactness and purity.
Integrity is also attributed to various parts or aspects of a person's life. We speak of attributes such professional, intellectual and artistic integrity. However, the most philosophically important sense of the term 'integrity' relates to general character. Philosophers have been particularly concerned to understand what it's for a person to exhibit integrity throughout life. Acting with integrity on some particularly important occasion will, philosophically speaking, always be explained in terms of broader features of a person's character and life.
What is it to be a person of integrity? Ordinary discourse about integrity involves two fundamental intuitions: first, that integrity is primarily a formal relation one has to oneself, or between parts or aspects of one's self; and second, that integrity is connected in an important way to acting morally, put differently, there are some substantive or normative constraints on what it's to act with integrity. How these two intuitions can be incorporated into a consistent theory of integrity isn't obvious, and most accounts of integrity tend to revolve about among these intuitions to the detriment of the other.
A number of accounts have been advanced, the most crucial of them being: (i) integrity as the integration of self; (ii) integrity as maintenance of identity; (iii) integrity as corresponding something; (iv) integrity as moral purpose; and (v) integrity as a virtue. These accounts are reviewed below. We then examine several issues that have been of central concern to philosophers exploring the concept of integrity: the relations between types of integrity, integrity and moral theory, and integrity and social and political conditions."

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