
The Art of Manliness #445: How to Close the Character Gap
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Oct 1, 2018 Professor Christian Miller discusses the concept of the character gap, highlighting how people are a mix of virtuous and vicious traits. He explores the influence of context on behavior, practices to strengthen moral character, and the impact of world religions on moral development. The podcast challenges the idea of labeling individuals as purely good or bad.
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Virtue Requires Behavior And Motivation
- Virtue requires both repeated behavior and the right motives.
- Christian Miller defines honesty as stable truthful actions across contexts plus virtuous motivation, not merely occasional truthful acts or self-interested reasons.
Most People Have Mixed Moral Character
- Most people are a mixed bag, neither virtuous nor vicious overall.
- Miller concludes psychological evidence shows people often behave admirably in some situations and poorly in others, placing most of us in a middle bell-curve.
Bystander Effect Cuts Helping To 7 Percent
- Bystander effect experiments show groups dramatically reduce helping in emergencies.
- In a 1969 lab study only 7% helped when a stranger did nothing, versus ~70% when alone, illustrating diffusion of responsibility.

