Goodness is not what we think it is.
We have spent centuries building systems around it - moral frameworks, ethical codes, religious commandments, philosophical theories - all of them attempting to answer the same question: how do we become good? And underneath that question is a quieter assumption that almost nobody examines, an assumption so deeply embedded in how we think about virtue and character and the moral life that it functions less like a belief and more like gravity. The assumption is this: that goodness is a destination. That it is something we move toward. That the distance between who we are and who we ought to be is a problem of effort, of will, of practice - and that with enough of these, we will eventually arrive.
Related Subjects
Philosophy