Courage contributes to the functioning of the soul by obeying the rational portion, it proceeds the appetitive portion with the rational portion, and conserves the declarations of motive through pain and desires. Courage is an excellence of the spirited portion of the soul also an individual’s passion and energy. Wisdom is the rational part of the soul that include an individual’s intellect. Being wise over rules the spirited portion and the appetitive portion giving to what is most beneficial to each portion. The virtue of courage is featured in Glaucon’s depiction of the perfectly just person. To be perfectly unjust, Glaucon claims, is more enjoyable than living a perfectly just life. The perfectly just man in Glaucon’s eyes is deprecated, underprivileged and lives a life with sorrow. Glaucon also says they will forever be miserable and that other people will constantly believe them to be unjust. Thus saying not one person desires justice for its own sake, however only for its consequences. Conserving the faith about what must be feared is a virtue of courage and also a trait of the perfectly just man in Glaucon’s eyes. Glaucon says that a perfectly just man is always feared of the consequences of the decisions they make because they want to be a just individual, yet this is an example of a virtue of courage because it is obeying the rational part of an individual’s
Courage contributes to the functioning of the soul by obeying the rational portion, it proceeds the appetitive portion with the rational portion, and conserves the declarations of motive through pain and desires. Courage is an excellence of the spirited portion of the soul also an individual’s passion and energy. Wisdom is the rational part of the soul that include an individual’s intellect. Being wise over rules the spirited portion and the appetitive portion giving to what is most beneficial to each portion. The virtue of courage is featured in Glaucon’s depiction of the perfectly just person. To be perfectly unjust, Glaucon claims, is more enjoyable than living a perfectly just life. The perfectly just man in Glaucon’s eyes is deprecated, underprivileged and lives a life with sorrow. Glaucon also says they will forever be miserable and that other people will constantly believe them to be unjust. Thus saying not one person desires justice for its own sake, however only for its consequences. Conserving the faith about what must be feared is a virtue of courage and also a trait of the perfectly just man in Glaucon’s eyes. Glaucon says that a perfectly just man is always feared of the consequences of the decisions they make because they want to be a just individual, yet this is an example of a virtue of courage because it is obeying the rational part of an individual’s