Benjamin Franklin’s Daily Virtue Questions: The Self-Improvement System

Benjamin Franklin didn’t wait for motivation to strike. He didn’t trust moods, inspiration, or good intentions. Instead, he asked himself questions—every single day. Not philosophical riddles. Not grand moral sermons. Simple, almost blunt prompts that forced action and reflection whether he felt like it or not. Franklin believed self-improvement was not a personality trait. It was a system. A Mind Obsessed With Personal Systems :contentReference[oaicite:0] lived at the intersection of ambition and self-discipline. Printer, inventor, diplomat, writer—his output was staggering even by modern standards. But Franklin didn’t attribute this to talent or energy alone. He believed people failed not because they lacked values, but because they failed to practice them consistently. His solution was deceptively simple: turn virtue into a…
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