Abstract
This article seeks to discern how, in spite of our fallenness, we can come to desire what is good. Judging desire and vision to be interdependent faculties, it finds that human reason alone is incapable of generating ‘good’ desire. Rather, desire must be transformed gradually and in relation to human vision. To this end, and drawing on James Alison and Iris Murdoch, particular practices are offered whose strength lies in focusing less on altering the objects than the quality of human vision and desire