i think some people, just like they're spiritually or musically toned def they're emotionally toned, ef they don't get even the taste of that connect, human connection that sometimes a good deed will produce. S i didn't mean to be denying that there constitutional differences and that those differences make things easier or harder. But i think the dan clines about habituation and and making your virtues a form of self interest, make your virtuous acts self interested, i think it's easier for some people than others. And what i'm saying is, if somebody isnit a moral aspirational project, which presupposes they have some grip on the moral concect cosm, aspiration
Where do our deepest personal values come from? Can we choose those values? Philosopher and author Agnes Callard of the University of Chicago talks about her book, Aspiration, with EconTalk host Russ Roberts. Callard explores the challenge of aspiration--who we are versus who we would like to become. How does aspiration work? How can we transform ourselves when we cannot know how it will feel to be transformed? Callard discusses these questions and more in this provocative episode.