The Editor-in-Chief should be a virtuous friend of the scientific and broader community
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The Editor-in-Chief should be a virtuous friend of the scientific and broader community

Affiliation:

1Bioethics Program, FLACSO Argentina, Tucumán 1966, Buenos Aires C1050 AAN, Argentina

2CNRS UMR 8011, Science Norms Democracy, Sorbonne Université, 75005 Paris, France

Email: tdaly@flacso.org.ar

ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1650-242X

Timothy Daly
1,2*

Affiliation:

3Independent Researcher, Miki-cho 761-0799, Kagawa-ken, Japan

ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3299-2772

Jaime A. Teixeira da Silva
3

Explor Cardiol. 2026;4:101298 DOI: https://doi.org/10.37349/ec.2026.101298

Received: February 15, 2026 Accepted: February 27, 2026 Published: March 02, 2026

Keywords

editorial leadership, virtue, academic publishing, correspondence, democracy

Picano [1] asks who the Editor-in-Chief (EiC) of an academic journal is, rather than just asking how the EiC should behave. This focus on character invites reflection from the tradition of virtue ethics. Though virtue ethics is found all over the world, in the Western philosophical tradition, the most notorious defender of virtue ethics is Aristotle. Here, we focus on the roles of the EiC in light of the four cardinal virtues—courage, temperance, justice, and prudence—and we add to these four virtues a particular reflection on the Aristotelian virtue of friendship (philia) [2] in “navigating the complex relationships among authors, reviewers, and publishers” (p. 1, [1]). We encourage thinking about the EiC as a virtuous friend of the scientific and broader community who encourages dialogue as a means to reach the truth. We offer questions that the EiC might wish to ask themselves in the form of character-building heuristics (Table 1), and encourage journals to offer a free forum for dialogue in the form of letters to the editor (LTEs) where virtuous debate at the interface of science and society can take place.

 Character-building questions for the Editor-in-Chief. Inspired by [2].

VirtueGuiding question for the Editor-in-Chief
CourageDo I embrace external criticism and divergent views so as to develop an excellent journal?
TemperanceDo I forgo self-indulgent pleasures in my decision making?
JusticeDo I correct the possible harms that my actions and those of other agents may cause?
PrudenceWhat is the best goal for the journal, and what is the best way to get there?
FriendshipDo I demonstrate goodwill towards all members of the community?

There are three units of analysis within normative ethical theories: the agent (virtue ethics), the act (deontology), and the outcome (consequentialism) [3]. Aristotle [4] focused on the agent and considered that the virtuous agent strives to find the middle ground, the golden mean, between two extremes. Between cowardice and foolhardiness is courage (andreia), between indulgence and insensitivity is temperance (sophrosune), between selfishness and selflessness is justice (dikaiosune), and between impetuosity and indecision is practical wisdom or prudence (phronesis). Friendship (philia) requires that parties should express mutual goodwill and, according to Aristotle, are of three kinds (aiming at virtue, utility or pleasure, according to Aristotle). We envisage Picano’s mention of the “complex relationships among authors, reviewers, and publishers” within the concept of a virtuous philia. Following Siapka [2], the use of reflections from virtue ethics is encouraged as a kind of character-building heuristics in the form of questions to oneself (Table 1).

Many of these themes are present in Picano’s editorial [1]. For instance, he mentions the “essential qualities” (p. 8) of a good editor, which include the sense of justice involved in correcting their own mistakes (p. 4) and the courage to be unpopular (p. 8). He also discusses duties from a deontological perspective (p. 8), which include declaring any and all conflicts of interest [5].

Moving this discussion towards friendship in the Aristotelian sense, we consider that the goal (or “telos” in Aristotelian terms) of academic publishing is the free exchange of ideas. As a virtuous friend of the community, the EiC’s interactions with the community should be oriented towards this overarching goal. The exchange of ideas includes the presentation of original research, as well as commentary, stressing the need for academic journals to allow for commentaries from their editorial leadership, as well as a diverse readership, both on published findings and other commentary, ideas or reflections. Such commentary could benefit not only that journal’s readership, but also a wider readership.

One source of commentary from a journal’s editorial board is the editorial. Editorials provide a diverse article format with different functions, including post-publication commentary. Broadly speaking, they communicate a journal’s personality [6]. It has been argued that editorials “stimulate” rather than “influence” readership, often provoking comments that may be in disagreement with a position on a given subject [7]. However, for editorials to efficiently perform this function (i.e., to allow an open and fair debate), the readership requires an accessible comment forum. Without such a forum, they would be deprived of the opportunity to become proactive citizens of an intellectual community, instead being positioned as passive consumers of editorial content. Providing such a forum is an act of goodwill towards all members of the community who read an academic journal.

LTEs serve important roles in communication in science. The ICMJE and COPE guidelines on ethical publishing both consider that journals should offer LTEs to their authors. Although the primary function recognised for LTEs is post-publication peer review, LTEs play many other roles in biomedical and other journals [8]. Importantly, LTEs can be written by individuals other than researchers, such as patients affected by a given disease [9], thereby increasing citizen engagement in academic publication, and broadly aligning with the communication goals of democracies and free societies. An editorial policy of publishing editorials without allowing for the possibility of LTEs would give editors a privileged approach to commentary akin to “we write, you read.” This approach would deny potential authors, both expert and non-experts alike who may have concerns with published content, from having their say. It would prevent them from expressing themselves in the same academic medium in which editors and their editorials have established exclusive rights, thus undermining readers’ rights as knowledge contributors in a phenomenon that has been coined “epistemic injustice” [10].

In conclusion, the virtuous EiC is a friend of science and society who encourages the free exchange of ideas in academic publishing and works towards that noble end.

Abbreviations

EiC: Editor-in-Chief

LTEs: letters to the editor

Declarations

Author contributions

TD, JATdS: Conceptualization, Investigation, Writing—original draft, Writing—review & editing, Validation. Both authors read and approved the submitted version.

Conflicts of interest

The authors declare that there are no conflicts of interest.

Ethical approval

Not applicable.

Consent to participate

Not applicable.

Consent to publication

Not applicable.

Availability of data and materials

Not applicable.

Funding

Not applicable.

Copyright

© The Author(s) 2026.

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Open Exploration maintains a neutral stance on jurisdictional claims in published institutional affiliations and maps. All opinions expressed in this article are the personal views of the author(s) and do not represent the stance of the editorial team or the publisher.

References

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Aristotle. Nicomachean ethics (W.D. Ross, Trans.). The Internet Classics Archive; 1925.
Teixeira da Silva JA, Dobránszki J, Bhar RH, Mehlman CT. Editors Should Declare Conflicts of Interest. J Bioeth Inq. 2019;16:27998. [DOI] [PubMed] [PMC]
Goodman NW. Why do anaesthesia journals publish editorials? Eur J Anaesthesiol. 2001;18:7035. [DOI] [PubMed]
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Teixeira da Silva JA, Daly T. A Free Comment Forum to Mitigate Epistemic Injustice in Academic Publication. World Aff. 2025;188:e70012. [DOI]
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Daly T, Teixeira da Silva JA. The Editor-in-Chief should be a virtuous friend of the scientific and broader community. Explor Cardiol. 2026;4:101298. https://doi.org/10.37349/ec.2026.101298
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