“…Note, however, that, for all the importance this insight may have to grasp how empirical self‐respect works, normative accounts of self‐respect, like the one we here employ, focus on the moral reasons people may have for a secure conviction of their own worth, and on how compelling such reasons may be. Normative self‐respect refers, Schemmel (2018, p. 7) notes, “to the moral correctness of individuals' convictions of their own worth, not to their status in the own eyes.” This is particularly clear when it comes to Rawls' account of self‐respect, which conveys not individuals' de facto psychology but the moral psychology that grounds his conception of justice. Rawls' account is anchored in his political conception of persons as free and equal citizens with two moral powers (Rawls, 1996, pp.…”