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    Jonathan Acuña Solano, Post Author
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Adapting Lesson Plans for Adult Online English Learners: Context, Communication, and Human-Centered Pedagogy

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Planning
AI-generated picture by Prof. Jonathan Acuña Solano in July 2026

Introductory Note to the Reader

     Reflection is one of the defining characteristics of effective teaching. Regardless of the discipline, examining our pedagogical decisions helps us grow professionally and better understand the needs of those we teach. For language teachers, reflection means asking whether the learning experiences we design truly foster meaningful communication and connect with learners' realities.

     The British Council course TeachingEnglish: How to Adapt Resources encouraged me to revisit my own approach to lesson planning and material selection. Although many examples were intended for teachers of children and adolescents, the course prompted valuable reflection on my practice as an online instructor of young adults and working professionals.

     One conclusion became particularly clear: while I appreciate published lesson plans as sources of inspiration, I rarely adapt them directly. No ready-made resource can fully reflect the academic, professional, and cultural contexts of my learners. Instead, I have found artificial intelligence to be a valuable partner in creating contextualized communication activities, always guided by sound pedagogy and the teacher's knowledge of learners.

     Ultimately, this essay is an invitation to reflect on how we design learning experiences that are meaningful, learner-centered, and capable of helping students communicate confidently beyond the classroom.

Jonathan Acuña Solano


Adapting Lesson Plans for Adult Online English Learners: Context, Communication, and Human-Centered Pedagogy

 

Abstract

The adaptation of lesson plans and teaching materials has become a fundamental skill in modern English Language Teaching (ELT), particularly in online environments serving young adults and working professionals. While many published materials provide structure and methodological support, they often fail to address the contextual realities, communicative needs, and emotional engagement required by adult learners. This paper reflects upon insights gained from the British Council course TeachingEnglish: How to Adapt Resources, especially Module 2, Unit 1, which focuses on adapting and selecting lesson plans. Drawing from personal teaching experience, reflections from course participants, and scholars such as Tomlinson, Nunan, Krashen, and Vygotsky, this essay argues that adapting materials is not merely a technical procedure but a human-centered pedagogical act. The discussion explores the role of contextualization, communicative authenticity, learner identity, scaffolding, critical thinking, and emotional relevance in the creation of communication activities for adult learners in online settings. Furthermore, the essay proposes a practical checklist for evaluating and designing ELT communication tasks grounded in Communicative Language Teaching (CLT) and Task-Based Language Teaching (TBLT). Ultimately, the paper contends that meaningful adaptation enables teachers to create learning experiences capable of helping learners withstand the communicative pressures of real life while fostering confidence, autonomy, and genuine engagement.

Key Words

Lesson Adaptation, Lesson Planning, Adult Language Learning, Online Language Teaching, Communicative Language Teaching, Task-Based Language Teaching, Contextualization, Material Development, Scaffolding, Learner Autonomy, British Council

 

 

Resumen

La adaptación de planes de clase y materiales didácticos se ha convertido en una competencia fundamental en la enseñanza moderna del inglés como lengua extranjera (ELT), especialmente en entornos virtuales dirigidos a jóvenes adultos y profesionales en ejercicio. Si bien numerosos materiales publicados ofrecen estructura y apoyo metodológico, con frecuencia no responden a las realidades contextuales, las necesidades comunicativas y el compromiso emocional que requieren los estudiantes adultos. Este ensayo reflexiona sobre los aprendizajes obtenidos en el curso del British Council TeachingEnglish: How to Adapt Resources, particularmente en el Módulo 2, Unidad 1, dedicado a la adaptación y selección de planes de clase. A partir de la experiencia docente personal, las reflexiones de los participantes del curso y los aportes teóricos de autores como Tomlinson, Nunan, Krashen y Vygotsky, se sostiene que la adaptación de materiales no constituye únicamente un procedimiento técnico, sino un acto pedagógico centrado en el ser humano. Asimismo, se analiza el papel de la contextualización, la autenticidad comunicativa, la identidad del estudiante, el andamiaje, el pensamiento crítico y la relevancia emocional en el diseño de actividades comunicativas para estudiantes adultos en entornos virtuales. Finalmente, se propone una lista de verificación práctica para evaluar y diseñar tareas comunicativas fundamentadas en la Enseñanza Comunicativa de Lenguas (CLT) y en la Enseñanza de Lenguas Basada en Tareas (TBLT). En última instancia, se argumenta que una adaptación significativa permite a los docentes crear experiencias de aprendizaje que preparan a los estudiantes para afrontar las exigencias comunicativas de la vida real, al tiempo que fortalecen su confianza, autonomía y participación auténtica.

 

 

Resumo

A adaptação de planos de aula e materiais didáticos tornou-se uma competência fundamental no ensino moderno de inglês como língua estrangeira (ELT), especialmente em ambientes on-line destinados a jovens adultos e profissionais em atividade. Embora muitos materiais publicados ofereçam estrutura e suporte metodológico, frequentemente deixam de atender às realidades contextuais, às necessidades comunicativas e ao envolvimento emocional exigidos pelos aprendizes adultos. Este ensaio apresenta reflexões decorrentes do curso do British Council TeachingEnglish: How to Adapt Resources, particularmente do Módulo 2, Unidade 1, voltado para a adaptação e seleção de planos de aula. Com base na experiência docente do autor, nas reflexões dos participantes do curso e nas contribuições teóricas de estudiosos como Tomlinson, Nunan, Krashen e Vygotsky, argumenta-se que a adaptação de materiais não representa apenas um procedimento técnico, mas um ato pedagógico centrado no ser humano. O texto também discute o papel da contextualização, da autenticidade comunicativa, da identidade do aprendiz, da andaimagem, do pensamento crítico e da relevância emocional na elaboração de atividades comunicativas para aprendizes adultos em contextos virtuais. Além disso, propõe uma lista de verificação prática para avaliar e elaborar tarefas comunicativas fundamentadas na Abordagem Comunicativa de Línguas (CLT) e no Ensino de Línguas Baseado em Tarefas (TBLT). Em última análise, defende-se que uma adaptação significativa permite aos professores criar experiências de aprendizagem capazes de preparar os estudantes para enfrentar as demandas comunicativas da vida real, ao mesmo tempo em que promovem confiança, autonomia e engajamento autêntico.

 

 

Introduction

For us language teachers, lesson planning has always occupied a central role in English Language Teaching. However, in contemporary online education, particularly when teaching young adults and working professionals, lesson planning has evolved far beyond simply following a textbook sequence or implementing publisher-created activities. Teachers today frequently navigate changing learner expectations, technological demands, cultural diversity, and professional realities that require flexibility and contextual sensitivity. As a result, adapting existing resources to fit one’s teaching target audience has become an essential pedagogical competence.

The British Council course TeachingEnglish: How to Adapt Resources offers valuable insights into how language instructors can select, evaluate, and modify lesson plans according to their own educational realities. While much of the course content appears directed toward primary or secondary education, its broader pedagogical principles remain highly relevant for instructors working with adult learners. Indeed, adult learners often require even greater contextualization and communicative authenticity because they seek immediate relevance between classroom activities and their personal, academic, or professional lives.

Reflecting on my own practice, I have realized that, as a language instructor, I rarely begin lesson planning from nothing. Instead, I tend to rely on structures I have previously developed through Task-Based Language Teaching (TBLT). As I noted during the course, “Using an existing lesson plan, especially in a course I have not taught before, gives a structure for the lesson: objectives, sequencing of activities, and production tasks” (Acuña Solano, personal reflection, 2026). This realization demonstrates that adaptation is not necessarily an abandonment of creativity. Rather, it involves using established frameworks as pedagogical sentinels that guide instructional coherence while still leaving room for personalization and contextualization.

At the same time, my reflective journaling notes also revealed skepticism toward overreliance on publisher-produced materials. Although such resources are often designed by experts, they frequently lack the cultural and professional specificity necessary for adult online learners. This paper, my 573rd blog post, argues that effective material adaptation must place learner realities at the center of pedagogical decision-making.

Existing Lesson Plans as Pedagogical Frameworks

Existing lesson plans offer undeniable advantages for language teachers. These teaching assets provide sequencing, pacing, objectives, and methodological consistency that can support instructors, especially when working with unfamiliar courses or new linguistic targets. Nunan (2004) argues that structured task sequencing is essential in communicative classrooms because learners benefit from gradual progression from controlled to freer production. Existing lesson plans often provide this structure effectively.

Nevertheless, adult online learning contexts introduce complexities that generic lesson plans frequently fail to address. Adult learners do not enter virtual classrooms as blank slates; they arrive carrying professional identities, workplace frustrations, academic pressures, aspirations, and communicative anxieties. Consequently, activities that may function effectively in a generalized global textbook may feel emotionally distant or irrelevant to adult learners.

During the British Council (n.d.) course, one teacher, who had been interviewed for the course content purposes, mentioned that she frequently searches online for lesson plans created by other educators and adapts them according to her classroom needs. Although I respect this practice, I recognized that my own approach differs considerably. I noted in my course reflection this:

“By using my own lesson plans with specific communication activities for college students and corporate adult learners, I save lots of time especially because I have already worked around a prompt for ChatGPT that has helped me get good results in terms of task creation” (Acuña Solano, personal reflection, 2026).

This statement of mine reflects a growing reality within contemporary ELT: teachers increasingly use artificial intelligence and digital tools not to replace pedagogy, but to enhance content personalization and lesson plan efficiency. AI-generated activities become meaningful only when filtered through teacher judgment, contextual awareness, and knowledge of learners.

Tomlinson (2011) emphasizes that materials should achieve “impact,” meaning they should engage learners emotionally, cognitively, and aesthetically. Adult learners, especially in online environments, can quickly disengage when materials feel artificial or disconnected from their work, professional realities. A communication activity about playground friendships may work for children, but corporate professionals discussing international negotiations require scenarios capable of provoking authentic reflection and interaction.

Contextualization and Learner-Centered Adaptation

One of the strongest ideas emerging from the course concerns contextualization. The British Council (n.d.) repeatedly emphasizes the importance of adapting materials to learner needs, cultural realities, class size, and available resources. Sandy Millin’s (quoted by the British Council, n.d.) checklist particularly illustrates this principle by asking teachers to evaluate whether materials help learners become autonomous, whether listening activities train rather than merely test listening, and whether materials avoid stereotypes.

These concerns align closely with learner-centered pedagogy. According to Vygotsky (1978), meaningful learning occurs when instruction connects with learners’ social and cognitive realities. Similarly, Krashen (1982) argues that emotional factors significantly affect language acquisition. If learners feel disconnected, anxious, or intellectually underestimated, their affective filter rises, reducing opportunities for acquisition. This issue becomes particularly important with adult learners. Adults often resent materials that appear infantilizing or disconnected from their lived experiences. In online classes, where emotional distance already exists, irrelevant materials may create a sudden draft of disengagement that quietly undermines participation and communicative willingness.

For this reason, my own checklist for communication activities prioritizes adult relevance. I ask whether topics respect learners intellectually and whether tasks connect to professional, academic, social, or personal realities. Adult learners generally do not want to discuss random hypothetical situations with no connection to their lives. Instead, they tend to engage more deeply when discussing workplace communication, ethical dilemmas, professional growth, technology, education, social change, or personal aspirations.

Jonathan’s Checklist for ELT Communication Activities

 

1. Communicative Purpose

  • Does the activity require meaningful communication?
  • Are students exchanging ideas, opinions, experiences, or interpretations?
  • Is communication more important than isolated grammar manipulation?

2. Contextualized Language

  • Is grammar/vocabulary embedded in a realistic or meaningful context?
  • Does the language connect to authentic situations or discussions?
  • Can learners imagine themselves using this language outside class?

3. Adult Relevance

  • Does the topic respect adult and young adult learners?
  • Is the content intellectually mature?
  • Does it connect to professional, academic, social, or personal realities?

4. Emotional or Cognitive Engagement

  • Will learners care about the topic?
  • Does the task encourage reflection, opinion, imagination, or problem-solving?
  • Is there enough human tension or relevance to sustain conversation?

5. Interaction

  • Does the activity promote pair/group communication?
  • Is there negotiation of meaning?
  • Are students responding to each other rather than only to the teacher?

6. Scaffolding

  • Is there enough support for successful communication?
  • Vocabulary bank?
  • Sentence starters?
  • Examples?
  • Guided prompts?

7. CEFR Appropriateness

  • Is the cognitive and linguistic demand suitable for the level?
  • For lower levels:
    • concrete language
    • predictable exchanges
    • survival communication
  • For higher levels:
    • abstraction
    • debate
    • interpretation
    • critical thinking

8. Clear Instructions

  • Are instructions concise and direct?
  • Is the task easy to understand quickly?
  • Is formatting classroom-friendly?

9. Functional Vocabulary

  • Is the vocabulary reusable in future communication?
  • Does it support fluency and interaction?
  • Is it practical rather than random?

10. Fluency Before Perfection

  • Does the activity prioritize expression and confidence?
  • Is there room for imperfect but meaningful communication?
  • Does the task lower anxiety and encourage participation?

11. Critical Thinking

  • Does the activity go beyond repetition?
  • Are students comparing, evaluating, reflecting, imagining, or solving problems?

12. Learner Identity and Agency

  • Can learners personalize responses?
  • Are students allowed to express genuine beliefs and experiences?
  • Does the task invite individuality?

 

Condensed ELT Version

Before finalizing the activity, ask:

  • Is it communicative?
  • Is it meaningful?
  • Is it adult-appropriate?
  • Is it interactive?
  • Is it scaffolded?
  • Is it level-appropriate?
  • Is the language contextualized?
  • Will students actually want to talk?
  • Does it promote confidence and fluency?
  • Does it encourage thinking, not just answering?

Importantly, contextualization does not mean abandoning linguistic goals. Rather, it means embedding grammar and vocabulary into meaningful communication tasks relevant to one’s students. Larsen-Freeman (2000) explains that grammar becomes more memorable when connected to authentic use and communicative purpose. Thus, language instruction should not isolate grammar from human interaction.

Communication Before Mechanical Accuracy

A major tension one can find within ELT involves balancing fluency and accuracy. Traditional approaches sometimes prioritize grammatical perfection to the extent that learners become afraid of speaking. In contrast, communicative methodologies emphasize meaningful interaction even when linguistic production remains imperfect. My checklist intentionally prioritizes fluency before perfection. I ask whether tasks encourage expression, lower anxiety, and create room for meaningful communication despite mistakes. This principle aligns strongly with Communicative Language Teaching and Task-Based Language Teaching.

Ellis (2003) argues that tasks should focus primarily on meaning rather than linguistic manipulation. Similarly, Long (1996) emphasizes negotiation of meaning as a critical component of language acquisition. When learners interact authentically, they notice communicative gaps and gradually refine their language. In online adult classes, these principles become even more significant. Many adult learners already carry emotional insecurities regarding English proficiency. Some fear professional embarrassment; others worry about sounding unintelligent. Teachers who excessively focus on correction may unintentionally reinforce these anxieties. This does not imply that accuracy lacks importance. Rather, correction must occur strategically and supportively. The teacher should function less as a punitive authority and more as a guide helping learners withstand communicative challenges without losing confidence.

Scaffolding and Cognitive Engagement

Another crucial concept highlighted both in the course and in my checklist is scaffolding. Effective communication activities require support structures that help learners participate successfully. These supports may include vocabulary banks, sentence starters, examples, guided prompts, or structured interaction patterns. Vygotsky’s (1978) concept of the Zone of Proximal Development suggests that learners achieve greater competence when supported appropriately. In language classrooms, scaffolding allows learners to attempt communicative tasks that might otherwise feel overwhelming.

However, scaffolding should not eliminate intellectual challenge. Adult learners often appreciate opportunities for reflection, debate, and critical thinking. Consequently, activities should gradually move from concrete language production toward more abstract communication depending on CEFR level. For lower-level learners, communication may revolve around survival language and predictable exchanges. Higher-level learners, meanwhile, benefit from discussions involving interpretation, ethical dilemmas, professional scenarios, and critical reflection. Such progression respects both linguistic development and adult cognitive maturity.

Importantly, intellectual engagement also increases motivation. When adult working learners feel that classroom conversations possess substance and relevance to their work lives, participation tends to become more natural and sustained. In contrast, repetitive drills without communicative purpose may quickly generate boredom or even quiet resistance.

Inclusion, Representation, and Human Dignity

The British Council (n.d.) also highlights equality, diversity, and inclusion in materials design. Sandy Millin’s checklist asks whether images reinforce stereotypes and whether materials can reflect learners’ cultural realities. These questions remain extremely relevant in global online classrooms.

Adult learners come from diverse cultural, professional, and social backgrounds. Materials that unintentionally stereotype cultures, genders, or professions risk alienating learners. Worse still, such materials may subtly communicate that certain identities are inferior or unworthy of representation. Teachers therefore carry ethical responsibilities when adapting materials. They should avoid content that appears to look down on particular groups or cultural experiences. Instead, materials should validate learner identities and encourage respectful intercultural communication.

Freire (1970) famously argued that education should humanize rather than dehumanize learners. In language teaching, this means recognizing learners not as passive recipients of grammar but as individuals with histories, ambitions, insecurities, and voices worth hearing. This human-centered perspective strongly informs my own checklist, particularly regarding learner agency. I ask whether learners can personalize responses and express genuine beliefs. Communication activities become far more meaningful when learners speak not merely to complete exercises, but to communicate aspects of their identities.

Online Teaching and the Need for Adaptation

Online teaching intensifies the need for thoughtful adaptation. In physical classrooms, teachers can often rely on spontaneous interaction, physical presence, and immediate classroom energy. Online environments, however, can easily become emotionally distant if activities lack engagement. A poorly adapted online lesson may produce silence, camera avoidance, multitasking, or superficial participation. Teachers must therefore design tasks capable of sustaining interaction despite technological mediation. This challenge became particularly evident after the rapid expansion of online education during and after the COVID-19 pandemic. Hodges, Moore, Lockee, Trust, & Bond (2020) distinguish carefully designed online learning from emergency remote teaching, emphasizing that effective online instruction requires intentional pedagogical planning.

In my own experience, communication activities function best online when they contain emotional relevance, authentic problem-solving, and opportunities for personalization. Adult learners frequently respond positively to discussions connected to workplace experiences, ethical dilemmas, future goals, cultural differences, or technological change. At times, adapting materials may involve small but significant modifications: changing names, professions, scenarios, discussion questions, or communicative outcomes. Yet these seemingly simple changes can dramatically increase learner engagement because learners recognize themselves within the materials.

Developing a Personal Checklist

One of the most valuable insights from the British Council course involves the idea of developing personalized evaluation criteria. Sandy Millin explains that her checklist emerged from reflecting on what she personally found useful in her context. This insight is profoundly important because no universal checklist can perfectly serve every teaching reality. My own checklist emerged gradually through years of teaching young adults and working professionals online. It prioritizes communication, contextualization, adult relevance, interaction, scaffolding, critical thinking, and learner identity. These criteria reflect not only methodological preferences but also accumulated classroom experience. Importantly, the checklist functions less as a rigid prescription and more as a reflective tool.

Teaching inevitably involves unpredictability, improvisation, and occasional contretemps. No lesson plan survives unchanged once human interaction begins. Nevertheless, reflective criteria help teachers maintain pedagogical coherence and intentionality. Furthermore, personalized checklists encourage professional autonomy. Teachers should not become mechanically dependent on textbooks, publishers, or institutional templates. Instead, they should critically evaluate materials according to learner needs and contextual realities.

Conclusion

Adapting lesson plans and teaching materials represents far more than a technical classroom skill. It constitutes an act of pedagogical interpretation shaped by learner realities, communicative goals, emotional engagement, and contextual awareness. The British Council course TeachingEnglish: How to Adapt Resources offers valuable principles for evaluating materials, yet its greatest contribution may lie in encouraging teachers to develop their own reflective criteria.

For teachers working with young adults and professionals in online environments, contextualization becomes particularly important. Adult learners require communication activities that respect their experiences, intellectual maturity, and professional realities. Generic publisher-created materials may provide useful structures, but meaningful learning often emerges only after thoughtful adaptation.

My own pedagogical reflections demonstrate that communication activities become most effective when they prioritize meaningful interaction, scaffolding, contextualized language, critical thinking, and learner agency. Such activities help learners not merely memorize linguistic forms but develop communicative confidence capable of transferring beyond the classroom into real-world situations.

Ultimately, teaching materials should function not as rigid scripts but as flexible frameworks capable of supporting human connection. In a world increasingly shaped by digital education and artificial intelligence, teachers remain essential not because they distribute information, but because they interpret contexts, understand learners, and create meaningful opportunities for communication. Effective adaptation, therefore, is not simply about changing activities. It is about recognizing learners as human beings whose voices deserve to be heard. 

San José, Costa Rica

Monday, July 13, 2026

 

📚 References

Acuña Solano, J. (2026). Personal reflections from TeachingEnglish: How to adapt resources course. Unpublished course notes.

Ellis, R. (2003). Task-based language learning and teaching. Oxford University Press.

Freire, P. (1970). Pedagogy of the oppressed. Continuum.

Hodges, C., Moore, S., Lockee, B., Trust, T., & Bond, A. (2020). The difference between emergency remote teaching and online learning. Educause Review, 27, 1–12.

Krashen, S. D. (1982). Principles and practice in second language acquisition. Pergamon.

Larsen-Freeman, D. (2000). Techniques and principles in language teaching (2nd ed.). Oxford University Press.

Long, M. H. (1996). The role of the linguistic environment in second language acquisition. In W. Ritchie & T. Bhatia (Eds.), Handbook of second language acquisition (pp. 413–468). Academic Press.

Nunan, D. (2004). Task-based language teaching. Cambridge University Press.

Tomlinson, B. (2011). Materials development in language teaching (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press.

Vygotsky, L. S. (1978). Mind in society: The development of higher psychological processes. Harvard University Press.



Monday, July 13, 2026



Conscience Without Witness: Moral Temptation and Psychological Punishment in O Mandarim

Conscience, Eça de Queirós, Ethics, Guilt, Moral Philosophy, O Mandarim, Psychological Punishment, Realism, Temptation 0 comments

 

Tocar ou não tocar a campainha
AI-generated Picture by Prof. Jonathan Acuña Solano in July 2026

Introductory Note to the Reader

     My first encounter with O Mandarim came through El Mandarín, the Spanish translation of Eça de Queirós's remarkable novella. Captivated by its philosophical depth and moral tension, I soon sought out the original Portuguese text, eager to experience the author's voice without the mediation of translation. That second reading confirmed what I had suspected from the beginning: this is not merely a satirical tale about sudden wealth or supernatural temptation, but a profound meditation on the nature of conscience.

     Throughout my academic and personal life, I have been fascinated by ethical inquiry, particularly the tradition that begins with Aristotle's reflections on virtue and moral character. From that perspective, O Mandarim stands as one of the finest literary explorations of ethical decision-making. Eça de Queirós transforms a deceptively simple hypothetical question into an unsettling examination of the human condition: What would we do if we could commit an immoral act without being seen, judged, or punished?

     The enduring power of the novella lies in its refusal to provide comfortable answers. Instead, it compels readers to examine their own moral convictions, reminding us that ethical choices are never confined to the external world. Whether our actions remain hidden from society or escape legal consequence, they continue to resonate within the private realm of conscience. Eça de Queirós suggests that no wrongdoing is ever truly invisible, for the deepest witness to every moral decision is the self.

     The following essay explores Teodoro's ethical dilemma through the lenses of moral philosophy and psychological realism, arguing that O Mandarim demonstrates the impossibility of silencing conscience. In doing so, it invites readers not only to evaluate the protagonist's choices but also to reflect upon their own responses to the haunting question posed by the famous bell, a campainha.

Jonathan Acuña Solano


Conscience Without Witness: Moral Temptation and Psychological Punishment in O Mandarim

 

Abstract

This essay examines the moral dilemma at the heart of José Maria de Eça de Queirós's O Mandarim, arguing that the novella transforms a philosophical thought experiment into a profound exploration of conscience, temptation, and psychological punishment. Through the character of Teodoro, Eça de Queirós constructs a narrative in which an apparently consequence-free crime exposes the enduring authority of the moral conscience over external justice. Drawing upon Aristotelian ethics, Kantian moral philosophy, psychological realism, and nineteenth-century literary criticism, the essay analyzes the progression from temptation and rationalization to guilt and failed redemption. It further contends that the protagonist's psychological suffering demonstrates that moral responsibility persists independently of legal accountability or social recognition. Ultimately, O Mandarim reveals that conscience remains the ultimate witness to human action, making genuine inner peace unattainable when ethical integrity has been compromised.

Keywords:

Conscience, Ethics, Temptation, Moral Philosophy, Psychological Punishment, Eça de Queirós, O Mandarim, Realism, Guilt

 

 

Resumen

Este ensayo analiza el dilema moral que constituye el eje central de O Mandarim, de José Maria de Eça de Queirós, y sostiene que la novela transforma un experimento filosófico en una profunda reflexión sobre la conciencia, la tentación y el castigo psicológico. A través del personaje de Teodoro, Eça de Queirós construye una narrativa en la que un crimen aparentemente exento de consecuencias revela la autoridad permanente de la conciencia moral por encima de la justicia externa. A partir de la ética aristotélica, la filosofía moral kantiana, el realismo psicológico y la crítica literaria del siglo XIX, el ensayo examina el tránsito desde la tentación y la racionalización hasta la culpa y el fracaso de la redención. Asimismo, argumenta que el sufrimiento psicológico del protagonista demuestra que la responsabilidad moral persiste con independencia de la rendición de cuentas legal o del reconocimiento social. En última instancia, O Mandarim pone de manifiesto que la conciencia constituye el testigo definitivo de toda acción humana, haciendo imposible alcanzar una paz interior auténtica cuando la integridad ética ha sido comprometida.

 

 

Resumo

Este ensaio analisa o dilema moral que constitui o núcleo de O Mandarim, de José Maria de Eça de Queirós, defendendo que a novela transforma um experimento filosófico numa profunda reflexão sobre a consciência, a tentação e o castigo psicológico. Por meio da personagem Teodoro, Eça de Queirós constrói uma narrativa na qual um crime aparentemente isento de consequências revela a autoridade permanente da consciência moral acima da justiça externa. Fundamentado na ética aristotélica, na filosofia moral kantiana, no realismo psicológico e na crítica literária do século XIX, o ensaio examina o percurso que vai da tentação e da racionalização até à culpa e ao fracasso da redenção. Sustenta ainda que o sofrimento psicológico do protagonista demonstra que a responsabilidade moral persiste independentemente da responsabilização jurídica ou do reconhecimento social. Em última análise, O Mandarim revela que a consciência permanece como a testemunha definitiva das ações humanas, tornando impossível alcançar uma verdadeira paz interior quando a integridade ética foi comprometida.

 



Introduction

In O Mandarim (1880), José Maria de Eça de Queirós constructs a compact yet philosophically penetrating narrative centered on a deceptively simple moral proposition: would one kill a distant stranger in exchange for wealth, if no one would ever know? Through the character of Teodoro, a minor Lisbon clerk who rings a bell that instantaneously causes the death of a wealthy Mandarin in China, Eça de Queirós dramatizes a modern moral experiment.

The novel transforms an abstract ethical question, popularized in 19th-century French thought, into psychological and narrative experience. Teodoro’s dilemma is not merely about greed but about the fragility of conscience in a world where distance, anonymity, and rationalization appear to dissolve responsibility. Ultimately, the novel demonstrates that while external justice may be evaded, internal moral law cannot be silenced. Through irony, satire, and psychological realism, Eça de Queirós reveals that the true punishment for invisible crime is self-awareness.

The Faustian Premise: Crime Without Witness

The moral scenario at the heart of O Mandarim echoes a philosophical problem circulated in French literary culture by figures such as Honoré de Balzac and Jules Claretie. The hypothetical question, whether one would kill an unknown Mandarin in China for wealth if the act bore no consequences, functioned as a thought experiment testing the limits of moral integrity. Eça de Queirós radicalizes the question by eliminating abstraction: Teodoro is given the bell, and he rings it.

The conditions of the experiment are crucial. First, the victim is geographically distant, which reduces emotional immediacy. Second, the act leaves no physical trace, no blood, no confrontation. Third, the reward is immediate and transformative. The moral dilemma is therefore insulated from social accountability. If morality were merely a social contract dependent on surveillance and punishment, Teodoro’s action would carry no internal burden.

Yet the novel implicitly rejects such a reduction. In Kantian terms, morality is not contingent on visibility but grounded in duty and rational autonomy (Kant, 1993). Teodoro’s act violates the categorical imperative, which demands that one treat humanity, whether in oneself or another, always as an end and never merely as a means. The Mandarin becomes precisely a means to Teodoro’s enrichment. By transforming a human life into an instrument of personal advancement, Teodoro collapses ethical universality into private desire.

Bourgeois Frustration and the Logic of Rationalization

Teodoro is neither monstrous nor revolutionary. He is mediocre, socially invisible, economically constrained, spiritually stagnant. His dissatisfaction reflects the emerging bourgeois anxieties of late 19th-century Europe. Eça de Queirós, a central figure of Portuguese Realism, frequently exposed the moral fragility beneath bourgeois respectability (Lourenço, 1992).

Before ringing the bell, a campainha, Teodoro rationalizes the act through incremental self-deception. He minimizes the victim’s individuality: the Mandarin is old, foreign, and remote. Death, he reasons, is inevitable. Such reasoning resembles what moral psychologists describe as moral disengagement, mechanisms through which individuals cognitively restructure harmful actions to reduce guilt (Bandura, 1999). By abstracting the Mandarin into a distant symbol, Teodoro weakens his moral imagination.

This process parallels the logic of utilitarian temptation. If one life, unknown and far away, secures one’s own flourishing, might the exchange be justified? Yet classical utilitarianism, as articulated by Mill (2001), still requires impartial consideration of all affected parties. Teodoro’s calculus is not genuinely utilitarian; it is radically self-interested, selfish, and egocentric. He performs what appears to be ethical reasoning in his mind, but his conclusions are predetermined by desire, by what he does not have or will ever achieve by himself.

Eça de Queirós’s irony lies in portraying the crime not as a grand transgression but as a small, almost casual gesture. The campainha rings easily. On the other hand, evil, the novel’s plot suggests, does not require dramatic villainy, only moral laziness combined with opportunity.

The Birth of Guilt: Internal Punishment

Once wealth arrives at his door, Teodoro expects liberation and a life of easiness. Once his new fortune is available, he travels, indulges in luxury, and gains the social recognition he previously lacked and was only able to daydream of. Yet instead of fulfillment and inner joy, Teodoro experiences psychological deterioration. Nightmares, hallucinations, visions of the devil, and obsessive thoughts about the Mandarin materializing in front of him begin to haunt him day and night. The absence of external punishment does not eliminate internal moral consequences.

This trajectory invites comparison with Fyodor Dostoevsky’s exploration of guilt in Crime and Punishment. Like Raskolnikov, Teodoro discovers that crime fractures the self, his own self. However, whereas Dostoevsky situates guilt within theological and existential struggle, Eça de Queirós frames it within irony and satire. Teodoro is not a philosophical radical testing moral boundaries; he is a conventional man undone by his own conscience.

From a philosophical standpoint, Teodoro’s suffering affirms the autonomy of moral law. Even absent legal structures, conscience functions as an internal ethical tribunal. This aligns with Kant’s (1997) conception of the “moral law within,” which produces a feeling of respect, and, when violated, a sense of self-reproach. Teodoro’s torment emerges not from fear of exposure but from awareness of having instrumentalized another human being. Eça de Queirós thus dismantles the illusion that secrecy neutralizes wrongdoing. The Mandarin’s geographical distance cannot produce psychological distance. The crime, though abstract in execution, becomes intensely concrete in Teodors’s memory.

Failed Atonement and the Limits of Reparation

Overcome by guilt, Teodoro’s attempts for restitution seem to be, in his eyes, the way out. For this reason, he travels to China seeking to compensate the Mandarin’s impoverished family living like beggars in a remote province. Symbolically, this movement represents a transition from abstraction to encounter, from a theoretical victim to a lived human reality. Yet his effort to find the Mandarin’s family fails. The reader understands, based on the narrative plot, that money cannot restore life, and generosity cannot undo the irreversible harm upon the Mandarin’s family. Here the novel anticipates modern ethical discussions about reparative justice. While a so-called restitution may mitigate harm, it cannot erase the moral fact of the initial violation. For this very reason, Teodoro’s journey becomes an exercise in futility. His wealth, acquired immorally, contaminates any attempt at virtue.

Eça de Queirós’s treatment of China also reflects 19th-century European Orientalist imaginaries. Although the Mandarin is initially a distant abstraction, Teodoro’s journey confronts him with cultural otherness that destabilizes his earlier indifference. As Said (1978) argues, Orientalism often reduces Eastern figures to symbolic functions within Western narratives. Eça de Queirós exploits this reduction to critique it: Teodoro’s moral failure begins precisely when he treats the Mandarin as a mere conceptual device rather than as a person embedded in family and community. The impossibility of complete atonement reinforces the gravity of the original act. Some moral thresholds, once crossed, cannot be reset.

Irony and Social Critique

While O Mandarim has readers engage in profound ethical questions, it does so through satire. Eça de Queirós exposes the hypocrisy of bourgeois morality, which outwardly prizes respectability yet inwardly harbors envy and resentment. Teodoro’s initial poverty is not destitution but humiliation, a wounded pride that renders him susceptible to temptation.

Irony permeates the narrative. The wealth that promises freedom in the mind of a tempted individual like Teodoro becomes a prison, and he is then living in a heated hell. The act that secures social ascent and prominence produces spiritual decline and degeneration. The “invisible” crime generates hyper-visible psychological distress in Teodoro’s psyche. Through these reversals, Eça de Queirós underscores the incompatibility between material success and moral corruption.

Unlike tragic heroes who fall through grand ambition, Teodoro falls through banality. This banality anticipates later reflections on ordinary complicity in wrongdoing. The novel suggests that Teodoro’s ethical collapse has arisen not from any sort of ideological extremism but from his everyday weakness.

Philosophical Tensions at the Core of the Dilemma

Teodoro’s moral crisis crystallizes around three tensions.

First, there is a conflict between utilitarian temptation and moral absolutism that the reader begins to sense from the beginning of the story. While this scenario appears to invite cost-benefit reasoning, the narrative ultimately affirms an absolute prohibition against using another life as a means.

Second, the opposition between external justice and internal conscience are also evident. Legal systems depend on detection and enforcement when a crime or transgression has been committed; moral conscience operates independently of both. Teodoro escapes the former but cannot escape the latter.

Third, the struggle between desire and responsibility is present in the story’s plot, too. Wealth offers sensual gratification in many different directions and social recognition and notoriety, yet these goods prove hollow when severed from integrity. Teodoro’s experience demonstrates that flourishing cannot be grounded in injustice.

Based on these three tensions found along the narrative of O Mandarim, Eça de Queirós’s novel aligns with a broader realist tradition that scrutinizes the ethical consequences of modern individualism. The isolated self, detached from communal accountability, remains nevertheless bound to its own moral awareness.

Conclusion

O Mandarim transforms a provocative hypothetical, ethical question into a sustained exploration of human conscience and conscious desire. Through Teodoro’s seemingly effortless crime and subsequent psychological unraveling, José Maria de Eça de Queirós argues that morality does not depend on surveillance, proximity, or punishment. The Mandarin’s death, though distant and unseen, reverberates within Teodoro’s inner life with inescapable force.

The novella’s enduring power lies in its irony. Evil requires no dramatic stage; it may occur quietly, privately, and rationally. Yet the self cannot remain intact after reducing another human being to an instrument. Teodoro’s ultimate realization, that he would surrender all wealth to undo the act, arrives too late. The experiment has already exposed the indestructibility of conscience.

In a modern world increasingly mediated by distance and abstraction, O Mandarim remains disturbingly relevant. It asks whether moral responsibility weakens when victims are invisible and consequences deferred. Eça de Queirós’s answer is unequivocal: the true witness to wrongdoing is the self. And that witness cannot be silenced.



San José, Costa Rica

Sunday, July 12, 2026

📚 References

Bandura, A. (1999). Moral disengagement in the perpetration of inhumanities. Personality and Social Psychology Review, 3(3), 193–209.

Kant, I. (1993). Grounding for the metaphysics of morals (J. W. Ellington, Trans.). Hackett. (Original work published 1785)

Kant, I. (1997). Critique of practical reason (M. J. Gregor, Trans.). Cambridge University Press. (Original work published 1788)

Lourenço, E. (1992). O labirinto da saudade. Gradiva.

Mill, J. S. (2001). Utilitarianism. Hackett. (Original work published 1863)

Said, E. W. (1978). Orientalism. Pantheon Books.

Appendix 1. Teodoro’s Moral Decline

Stage

Narrative Event

Dominant Psychological State

Moral Process

Archetypal Significance

1. Ordinary World

Teodoro lives as an underpaid Lisbon clerk.

Dissatisfaction, envy, frustration.

Moral equilibrium, though marked by resentment.

The Ordinary World (Campbell).

2. The Temptation

The Devil presents the bell and the proposition.

Curiosity mixed with desire.

External temptation enters consciousness.

The Call to Adventure becomes a diabolical invitation.

3. Rationalization

He debates whether to ring the bell.

Intellectual justification.

Begins suppressing conscience through logic.

First encounter with the Shadow.

4. Moral Collapse

He rings the bell.

Excitement followed by disbelief.

The ethical boundary is crossed.

Failure at the Threshold.

5. Immediate Reward

He inherits the Mandarin's fortune.

Euphoria and exhilaration.

Material success reinforces immoral choice.

False Apotheosis.

6. Hedonistic Escape

Luxury, travel, women, social prestige.

Pleasure, vanity, intoxication.

Attempts to silence conscience through excess.

Seduction by the Persona.

7. Return of the Shadow

The Mandarin repeatedly appears in visions.

Anxiety, paranoia, insomnia.

Guilt becomes psychologically autonomous.

The Shadow refuses repression.

8. Failed Atonement

Journey to China seeking forgiveness.

Hope mixed with despair.

Attempts external restitution.

Descent into the Inmost Cave.

9. Recognition

Understands wealth cannot erase murder.

Moral awakening.

Accepts responsibility intellectually.

Partial illumination without transformation.

10. Final Confession

Addresses the reader at the novella's end.

Regret, ambiguity, unresolved temptation.

Conscience survives; redemption remains uncertain.

The Failed Return—no Hero's Boon is obtained.

Created by Prof. Jonathan Acuña Solano

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Thank you for taking the time to read this article. If you would like to reinforce its main ideas and revisit its most important concepts from a different perspective, I invite you to watch the accompanying explainer video.

Designed to complement—not replace—the written essay, the video highlights the central arguments, provides additional context, and offers a concise visual overview of the topics discussed. Whether you're revisiting the article later or simply prefer to reinforce your learning through audiovisual content, I hope the presentation proves both informative and enjoyable.

If you find the video helpful, I would be delighted if you explored my YouTube channel, where you'll discover many more explainers on literature, English language teaching, linguistics, mythology, culture, education, and related subjects.

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Conscience Without Witness Moral Temptation and Psychological Punishment in O Mandarim by Jonathan Acuña





Sunday, July 12, 2026


Location: San José, Curridabat, Freses, Costa Rica

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