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Sign up for Jacobs Premium: thenathanjacobspodcast.com In this postscript to his anthropology and ethics series, Dr. Jacobs examines why people experience discomfort when confronted with moral assessments that challenge their preferred behaviors or beliefs. He draws parallels between objective aesthetics and ethics, arguing that humans possess default intuitions about justice and fairness that create psychological tension when their actions conflict with moral reality. Dr. Jacobs discusses the problems of confirmation bias and social pressure in ethical reasoning, advocating for beginning moral inquiry with foundational metaphysical questions rather than applied ethics. The episode concludes with practical considerations for personal ethical development, distinguishing between philosophical assessment, political implications, and pastoral guidance in the gradual cultivation of virtue. All the links: Substack: https://nathanajacobs.substack.com/ Instagram: / thenathanjacobspodcast Website: https://www.nathanajacobs.com/ X: https://x.com/NathanJacobsPod Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/0hSskUt... Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast... Facebook: / nathanandrewjacobs Academia: https://vanderbilt.academia.edu/Natha... 00:00:00 Intro 00:01:24 Objective aesthetics 00:05:25 The human yearn for justice 00:15:39 Resisting confirmation bias 00:23:26 Analyzing at level 4 00:26:59 The cognitive minority 00:36:52 Deciding how to live 00:40:19 Politics and morality 00:43:06 Forming in virtue Other words for the algorithm… C.S. Lewis, moral argument, Peter Berger, cognitive minority, confirmation bias, realism, nominalism, natural law, Aristotle, virtue ethics, Thomas Aquinas, Thomism, Immanuel Kant, Kantian ethics, deontology, consequentialism, utilitarianism, applied ethics, metaethics, moral philosophy, ethical theory, objective morality, moral relativism, moral objectivism, Desert Fathers, Eastern Orthodox, patristics, spiritual formation, virtue development, incremental sanctification, theosis, deification, anthropology, theological anthropology, Christian ethics, moral psychology, social pressure, cultural conformity, William James, will to believe, ancient philosophy, Stoicism, Platonic realism, Aristotelian ethics, scholasticism, medieval philosophy, Christian philosophy, moral intuition, conscience, natural moral law, Edward Feser, David Bentley Hart, Bishop Robert Barron, Jordan Peterson, Jonathan Pageau, moral epistemology, epistemology, philosophy of religion, systematic theology, practical theology, pastoral care, spiritual direction, moral development, character formation, habit formation, prudence, temperance, courage, justice, cardinal virtues, vice, sin, repentance, conversion, spiritual struggle, asceticism, monasticism, John of Damascus, Gregory of Nyssa, Basil the Great, John Chrysostom, Origen, Anthony of Egypt, church fathers, patristic theology, Orthodox theology, Catholic theology, Protestant theology, moral theology, casuistry, conscience formation, discernment, spiritual maturity, gradual growth, incremental change