Go Back Research Article December, 2001

Virtue, Personality, and Social Relations: Self-Control as the Moral Muscle

Abstract

Morality is a set of rules that enable people to live together in harmony, and virtue involves internalizing those rules. Insofar as virtue depends on overcoming selfish or antisocial impulses for the sake of what is best for the group or collective, self-control can be said to be the master virtue. We analyze vice, sin, and virtue from the perspective of self-control theory. Recent research findings indicate that self-control involves expenditure of some limited resource and suggest the analogy of a moral muscle as an appropriate way to conceptualize virtue in personality. Guilt fosters virtuous self-control by elevating interpersonal obligations over personal, selfish interests. Several features of modern Western society make virtue and self-control especially difficult to achieve.

Keywords

Self-Control Virtue Moral Muscle Personality Morality Antisocial Impulses Self-Control Theory Vice Sin Guilt Interpersonal Obligations Social Harmony Limited Resource Virtuous Behavior Modern Society Self-Discipline
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Volume 67
Issue 6
Pages 1165-1194
ISSN 1467-6494
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