 Christian Miller notes that there's a gap between how we think of our moral self and our actual behavior, which is often rooted in context. We might know this, but on a deeper level, we also rationalize. Maybe I'm not perfect, but overall, I'm a moral person. This gap reveals why moral leadership, which depends upon our own virtue, is not enough. We must strive for ethical leadership. Ethical leadership requires leaders to be moral, but it also requires the capacity to reflect, to ask hard questions, to deliberate, and to examine the reasons for our moral choices in a larger context. Ethical leaders have the humility to acknowledge this gap, as well as self-awareness. They have also developed habits of mind and heart to critically think about their moral choices and how they arrive at them. Lead well this week.