The Minefield

Ramadan: The Heart and the Moral Life — with Stephen Darwall

Feb 18, 2026
Stephen Darwall, Yale moral philosopher known for work on the second-person standpoint and moral emotions, joins to explore the heart as our moral core. He defines the heart as a syndrome of emotional capacities. He contrasts remorse and guilt, teases apart deontic versus heartfelt forgiveness, and discusses how vulnerability and heartfelt exchange transform moral perception.
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INSIGHT

Heart As A Knowing Medium

  • The heart is conceived as a knowing medium, not just feeling; it receives moral truths that reason alone cannot access.
  • Waleed Ali cites Quranic and Islamic traditions where hearts can be 'too covered' to grasp truth, making cultivation necessary.
INSIGHT

Polish The Heart Like An Eye

  • Al-Ghazali's eye-and-heart metaphor: the heart must be polished to receive light that lets us truly see moral reality.
  • Scott Stevens explains dangers of too much or too little 'light' that blind or damage the heart.
INSIGHT

Two Registers Of Morality

  • Moral life has two complementary registers: deontic duties (oughts, rights) and non-deontic heart relations (love, seeing others rightly).
  • Scott argues love provides access to aspects of moral reality that 'ought' language cannot reach.
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