Jonathan Haidt
1 min readApr 18, 2016

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I love this essay — it conveys a really important point: Moral leadership usually doesn’t require any intention to lead. When people commit to doing something because they want to solve a problem, or when they act consistently on a principle, at some risk to themselves, the world often arranges itself around them to follow them. This may be why moral leaders usually seem so humble — they were just doing what they thought was right. They were not trying to lead.

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