Y11W41VC Character as practice, not essence
For most of Western history, character was understood as something you had — a set of stable virtues built into who you are. Aristotle disagreed. For him, character was what you practised, repeatedly, until it became automatic. The modern research largely sides with Aristotle. This week's article examines what character actually is, if it isn't the fixed essence most people imagine, and what this means for how it's built.
Core Vocabulary
virtue
/ˈvɜːtʃuː/|vir·tue
noun
A morally good quality or characteristic; an admirable trait that reflects ethical excellence.
Word Breakdown: Latin: virtus = excellence, strength; vir = man; originally meant strength or excellence
Word family: virtuous (adj), virtuously (adv)
Synonyms: moral quality, admirable trait, excellence, good character
Collocations: practise virtue, develop virtue, virtue of honesty, virtue as a habit
Example: Aristotle argued that virtue is not a fixed gift but a developed capacity — cultivated through repeated practice until the right action becomes habitual.
situational
/ˌsɪtʃuˈeɪʃənl/|sit·u·a·tion·al
adjective
Depending on or varying with the circumstances of a particular situation; not uniform across all contexts.
Word Breakdown: situation (Latin: situs = place/position) + -al; relating to particular circumstances
Word family: situation (n), situationally (adv)
Synonyms: context-dependent, circumstantial, situation-specific
Collocations: situational factor, situational influence, situational behaviour, highly situational
Example: Milgram's and Zimbardo's experiments showed that behaviour is often highly situational — ordinary people do extraordinary things when placed in particular circumstances.
disposition
/ˌdɪspəˈzɪʃn/|dis·po·si·tion
noun
A tendency or inclination to behave in a particular way; an underlying orientation that shapes responses across situations.
Word Breakdown: Latin: disponere = to arrange; dis- (apart) + ponere (to place); a way of being arranged
Word family: dispose (vb), disposed (adj)
Synonyms: tendency, inclination, proclivity, orientation
Collocations: natural disposition, dispositional trait, show a disposition toward, dispositional kindness
Example: Situationist research challenges the notion of stable dispositions — arguing that behaviour is more influenced by context than by fixed internal traits.
cultivate
/ˈkʌltɪveɪt/|cul·ti·vate
verb
To develop through deliberate effort and care; to nurture a quality through sustained practice.
Word Breakdown: Latin: cultivare = to till; extended to developing any quality through care
Word family: cultivation (n), cultivated (adj)
Synonyms: develop, foster, nurture, build
Collocations: cultivate virtue, cultivate character, cultivate a habit, cultivate good practice
Example: Aristotle's model of character development argues that virtues are cultivated — grown through repeated right action until the behaviour becomes natural.
habituate
/həˈbɪtʃueɪt/|ha·bit·u·ate
verb
To make habitual through repetition; to accustom oneself or another to something through repeated exposure or practice.
Word Breakdown: Latin: habituare = to make something a habit; habitus = condition/habit; from habere = to have
Word family: habituation (n), habituated (adj)
Synonyms: accustom, make a habit, train through repetition, condition
Collocations: habituate through practice, become habituated, habituate virtue, need to habituate
Example: Aristotle argued that we become honest by acting honestly — we habituate virtue through practice until the disposition becomes second nature.
context-dependent
/ˈkɒntekst dɪˈpendənt/|con·text-de·pen·dent
adjective
Varying according to the particular circumstances; not fixed or uniform but shaped by the situation.
Word Breakdown: Context (Latin: contextus = connection; con- + texere = to weave) + dependent; shaped by the surrounding conditions
Word family: situational (adj)
Synonyms: situational, circumstantial, variable by context
Collocations: context-dependent behaviour, highly context-dependent, context-dependent response
Example: Situationist researchers argue that most behaviour is highly context-dependent — the same person who acts generously in one setting may not do so in another.
synthesis
/ˈsɪnθɪsɪs/|syn·the·sis
noun
The combination of separate elements into a unified whole; an integrated view that draws from multiple positions.
Word Breakdown: Greek: synthesis = putting together; syn- (together) + tithenai (to place)
Word family: synthesise (vb), synthetic (adj)
Synonyms: integration, combination, unified view, composite
Collocations: theoretical synthesis, synthesis of evidence, reach a synthesis, a synthesis emerges
Example: The article argues for a synthesis — neither the purely situationist view nor the purely dispositional view captures the full picture of how character and context interact.
essence
/ˈesns/|es·sence
noun
The fundamental or intrinsic nature of something; what something is at its most basic or defining level.
Word Breakdown: Latin: essentia = being; esse = to be; what something essentially is
Word family: essential (adj), essentially (adv)
Synonyms: fundamental nature, core nature, defining quality
Collocations: essence of character, in essence, the essence of virtue, denied to be the essence
Example: The article challenges the idea that character is essence — a fixed inner nature that people either have or lack — arguing instead that character is practice.
Technical Terms
virtue ethics
/ˈvɜːtʃuː ˈɛθɪks/|vir·tue eth·ics
noun phrase
the moral tradition centring on character rather than rules or outcomes
Synonyms: character ethics, aretaic ethics, Aristotelian ethics
Collocations: within virtue ethics, virtue ethics emphasises, virtue ethics versus consequentialism
Example: Virtue ethics locates the source of moral action not in rules or consequences but in character — asking not 'what should I do?' but 'what kind of person should I be?', and treating the virtues as habits cultivated through practice rather than principles derived through reason.
situationism
/ˌsɪtʃuˈeɪʃ(ə)nɪz(ə)m/|sit·u·a·tion·ism
noun
the research tradition showing situations strongly shape behaviour
Synonyms: situation-based behaviour theory, context-determinism, social situationist position
Collocations: situationism challenges virtue ethics, strong situationism, situationism in social psychology
Example: Situationism, drawing on Milgram and Zimbardo, argues that behaviour is determined more by situational context than by stable character traits — a challenge to virtue ethics that the psychological evidence of the twentieth century made difficult to dismiss.
mixed traits
/mɪkst treɪts/|mixed traits
noun phrase
Miller's term for partial virtues that work in some contexts and fail in others
Synonyms: trait inconsistency, cross-situational variability, blended character
Collocations: people have mixed traits, mixed traits complicate, evidence for mixed traits
Example: Mixed traits describes the empirical finding that most people are virtuous in some contexts and not others — generous in the domain they care about, oblivious in the one they do not — which challenges both the unity-of-virtue claim in Aristotle and the pure situationism of social psychology.
moral formation
/ˈmɒr(ə)l fɔːˈmeɪʃ(ə)n/|mor·al for·ma·tion
noun phrase
the development of character through practice and habituation
Synonyms: character development, virtue cultivation, ethical habituation
Collocations: moral formation through practice, moral formation in communities, long-term moral formation
Example: Moral formation in the Aristotelian tradition is not a matter of learning rules but of habituation — performing virtuous acts until the disposition to perform them becomes automatic, so that the virtuous person does not deliberate about whether to be kind but finds kindness natural.
phronesis
/frəˈniːsɪs/|phro·ne·sis
noun
Aristotle's concept of practical wisdom, the capacity to act well in specific situations
Synonyms: practical wisdom, Aristotelian prudence, contextual moral intelligence
Collocations: exercise phronesis, phronesis requires experience, phronesis guides virtue
Example: Phronesis is Aristotle's term for the master virtue — the practical wisdom that recognises which virtue is called for in which situation and in what degree, without which courage becomes recklessness and honesty becomes cruelty.
Figurative Phrases
practice makes perfect
Repeated practice of a skill or behaviour leads to mastery; competence is developed through consistent effort and rehearsal, not innate talent alone. The phrase aligns with Aristotelian views of virtue as something cultivated, not inherited.
Etymology/Type: proverb; 'perfect' figurative
Synonyms: repeated action develops skill and virtue, doing something many times leads to mastery, consistent effort produces improvement
Example: Practice makes perfect captures Aristotle's moral psychology precisely: virtue is not a natural gift but an achievement of habituation — the courageous person is one who has practised courage until it has become their natural response.
second nature
A habit or skill so thoroughly acquired through practice that it feels natural and automatic, as if it were an innate quality. In character development, it describes the point at which virtuous behaviour no longer requires conscious effort.
Etymology/Type: idiom; not literally a second nature
Synonyms: something that has become automatic through long practice, behaviour that no longer requires deliberate effort, an acquired habit that feels innate
Example: Virtue in Aristotle's account is the condition in which good action has become second nature — the mark of the genuinely virtuous person is not that they struggle to do right but that doing right has become the path of least resistance.
rise to the occasion
To respond to a challenge or important moment with the skill, composure, and effectiveness the situation demands; to perform well under pressure when it counts. The phrase implies that character is revealed precisely when circumstances are difficult.
Etymology/Type: idiom; not literal rising
Synonyms: perform well under pressure, meet the demands of a difficult situation, exceed expectations when circumstances require it
Example: Whether people rise to the occasion depends partly on character and partly on context — situationism's challenge to virtue ethics is precisely that the same person who rises heroically in one setting may fail entirely in another where the situational pressures differ.
show your true colours
To reveal one's real character, values, or intentions, especially under pressure or in testing circumstances that strip away social performance. The phrase implies a contrast between the self one presents and the self one actually is.
Etymology/Type: idiom; no literal colours
Synonyms: reveal your real character, act in a way that exposes your genuine nature, display who you really are under pressure
Example: The situationist challenge to the idea of showing your true colours is that what appears under pressure may reveal as much about the situation as about the person — Zimbardo's prison experiment suggesting that the situations we are placed in can elicit behaviour that neither we nor observers would have predicted from prior character.
good to the core
Thoroughly and genuinely virtuous; possessing good character in a deep and stable way, not merely on the surface or in convenient circumstances. The phrase suggests that moral goodness is embedded across a person's entire character.
Etymology/Type: idiom; 'core' figurative
Synonyms: fundamentally good in character, virtuous throughout, genuinely good rather than merely appearing so
Example: Virtue ethics aspires to produce people who are good to the core — not merely compliant with rules but possessed of dispositions that make virtuous action natural — and moral psychology asks whether that aspiration corresponds to any real psychological structure.
the test of character
A difficult, pressured, or morally complex situation that reveals a person's true values, priorities, and resilience. The phrase implies that character is not demonstrated in ease, but exposed under genuine challenge.
Etymology/Type: idiom; figurative 'test'
Synonyms: a situation that reveals genuine character under pressure, a challenge that shows what a person is really like, a moment of difficulty that distinguishes genuine virtue from mere appearance
Example: Situationism suggests that the test of character may reveal as much about the test as about the character — the systematic influence of situational variables on behaviour complicating the assumption that what a person does under pressure is a transparent expression of who they are.
Confusing Words
disposition (inclination) vs disposition (arrangement)
Disposition is a polysemous word — spelled and pronounced identically in both uses — but its meaning differs depending on whether it refers to a person's inner tendencies or to the arrangement of external things.
- disposition (inclination) — a person's inherent tendency, temperament, or character; the habitual leaning of the mind or will. In virtue ethics, a disposition toward courage is the settled character that makes courageous action natural. This is the psychological sense of the word.
- disposition (arrangement) — the way in which things are arranged, placed, or ordered. The disposition of forces on a battlefield describes their physical arrangement. A will's disposition of assets describes how they are allocated. This is the organisational sense of the word.
Context determines the sense: if the word refers to a person's character or inner tendency, the psychological inclination sense applies. If it refers to the arrangement or allocation of things, the organisational sense applies.
cultivate vs inculcate
These verbs both describe developing qualities, habits or beliefs in a person, but they differ in method and tone.
- To cultivate is to develop or nurture something gradually through care, practice and deliberate effort. It suggests growth over time.
- To inculcate is to instil an idea, value or habit through repeated teaching or instruction. It often has a more forceful or institutional tone.
Use cultivate when emphasising careful development through practice and care. Use inculcate when emphasising repeated teaching that instils a belief or habit.
essence vs substance
Both words are used to describe what is most fundamental about something, but they carry different philosophical connotations and are used in different argumentative contexts.
- essence — the intrinsic, defining nature of something; what something must be in order to be the kind of thing it is. In virtue ethics, the essence of a virtue is what makes it that virtue rather than a deficient or excessive version of it. The word carries metaphysical weight, implying a necessary and unchanging core.
- substance — material or content; what something is made of or consists of in a more concrete sense. An argument with substance is one that contains something real and worth engaging with. The word is less committed to the idea of a necessary defining nature and more focused on what is actually present and meaningful.
If referring to the necessary and defining nature that makes something what it is, use essence. If referring to the concrete content or material that gives something genuine weight or significance, use substance.
- Choosing a selection results in a full page refresh.
- Opens in a new window.