Deliberative Empathy

There are two distinctive features of Aristotle’s ethics that are useful for us, and it so happens they are also key to understanding Aristotle’s “science of happiness.” First, Aristotle focuses not on character as some fixed and immutable quality, like temperament. Rather, his emphasis is on the development of character through the deliberate cultivation of […]

Continue Reading

Balancing Act

Taking a cue from Aristotle’s Doctrine of the Mean, I talked about humility as a balance between too much confidence, which produces deliberative arrogance, and too little confidence, which produces timidity. We can generally recognize the extremes when we see them (and especially when we encounter them in dialogue), but it’s a lot harder to […]

Continue Reading

Timidity

Deliberative humility can be conceived as a “mean between extremes,” which implies a continuum. At one end, we’ve seen what we might call deliberative arrogance, but what’s at the other end of the continuum? We don’t really have an adequate word for it, so I’m co-opting the word timidity — though diffidence usefully captures another […]

Continue Reading

Humility

As we saw in the introduction to the Everyday Excellence challenge, deliberative humility is one of the basic excellences of mind. Superficially, this is the excellence of being open to the possibility that we don’t have all the answers. But if we don’t have all the answers, then what should we do?On this first day […]

Continue Reading

Everyday Excellence

Are you up for a philosophical challenge? Great — let’s go! Excellencifying isn’t about superhuman feats of excellence; it’s about cultivating daily habits of acting and thinking that lead to excellence. I’m introducing a monthly challenge to cultivate everyday excellence. Our first series of challenges are about excellences of mind. Let’s start by defining excellences […]

Continue Reading