It is something that must be lived spontaneously. He said, “without these no one would have ever a prospect of becoming good” (Aristotle, 1925, p. 35). Aristotle believed we can all be moral, but most of us fail because we believe that merely knowing about ethics will result in our being good. There is a wide gulf between knowing and being. He argued this self-delusion is much like the physician’s patient who listens carefully to the doctor, but follows none of the advice. He says, “As the latter will not be made well in body by such course of treatment, the former will not be made well in soul by such a course of philosophy” (Aristotle, 1925, p. 35).