The process by which unchosen demands shape a self into something denser than preferences — a formation requiring submission to external authority that therapeutic culture has dissolved.
Character, in the tradition Philip Rieff inherited and extended, is not a personality trait but a shape imposed upon the self through sustained submission to demands the self did not choose and cannot negotiate. The Greek ethos, the monastic discipline, the apprenticeship under a master — each is a formative process that works through the dialectic of prohibition and obedience, resistance and submission, demand and character. The apprentice sweeps the workshop not because sweeping is therapeutic but because the master demands it. The demand is often experienced as arbitrary, excessive, pointless. The experience of enduring the demand without understanding its purpose is what forms character: the apprentice learns, beneath conscious awareness, that the relationship to the craft is not one of consumer to product but of servant to master. Over years, the submission becomes identity. The apprentice who once resented the demand becomes a practitioner who understands it as necessary, who imposes it on the next apprentice, who transmits the character the demand formed.