The inseparability of character and practical reason --
2. Discerning the particulars --
An alternative legislative model --
Perceiving ethical salience --
Seeing through emotions --
Strategies for expanding horizons --
3. The choices of a character --
Present and future intention --
The practical syllogism --
The more complex plans of a character --
Choice includes revision of ends --
Fitting contemplation in a life --
Good and bad characters --
Friends as external goods --
Happiness as including the happiness of others --
Friendship and wider altruism --
A friend as another but separate self --
Conditions for attachment --
Virtuous parents and virtuous children (or sons) --
The limitations of private education --
5. The viability of a developmental model --
The rationality of the non-rational part --
The inappropriateness of harsh sanctions --
The intentionality of emotions --
Learning to see aright --
Learning to make choices --
Habituation as critical practice --
The pleasure intrinsic to practice --
Practice includes experience.