Dictionary Definition
bravery
Noun
1 a quality of spirit that enables you to face
danger of pain without showing fear [syn: courage, courageousness] [ant:
cowardice]
2 feeling no fear [syn: fearlessness] [ant:
fear]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
Noun
- Being brave, courageousness.
- A brave act.
Synonyms
- italbrac being brave courageousness, fearlessness
Translations
- Chinese: 勇敢 (yǒnggǎn)
- Dutch: moed
- Finnish: rohkeus
- French: courage
- German: Tapferkeit
- Greek: ανδρεία (andría)
- Japanese: 勇気 (ゆうき, yūki)
- Korean: 용감성 (yonggamseong)
- Portuguese: bravura
- Russian: храбрость (xrábrost’)
- Spanish: valor
- Turkish: cesaret
Related terms
Extensive Definition
Courage, also known as bravery, will and
fortitude, is the ability to confront fear, pain, risk/danger, uncertainty, or intimidation. "Physical
courage" is courage in the face of physical pain, hardship, or
threat of death, while "moral courage" is the courage to act
rightly in the face of popular opposition, shame, scandal, or
discouragement.
Discussion in religions
The Tao Te Ching states that courage is derived from love ("慈 loving 故 causes 能 ability 勇 brave") and explains: "One of courage, with audacity, will kill. One of courage, but gentle,, spares life. From these two kinds of courage arise harm and benefit."In Roman
Catholicism, courage is one of the four cardinal
virtues, along with prudence, justice, and temperance. ("Cardinal" in
this sense means "pivotal"; it is one of the four cardinal virtues
because to possess any virtue, a person must be able to sustain it
in the face of difficulty.) In both Catholicism and Anglicanism,
courage is also one of the
seven gifts of the Holy Spirit.
Discussion in philosophy
As a virtue, courage is discussed extensively in Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics, where its vice of deficiency is cowardice and its vice of excess is recklessness.Søren
Kierkegaard opposed courage to angst, while Paul Tillich
opposed an existential courage to be to non-being,
fundamentally equating it with religion:
- "Courage is the self-affirmation of being in spite of the fact of non-being. It is the act of the individual self in taking the anxiety of non-being upon itself by affirming itself ... in the anxiety of guilt and condemnation. ... every courage to be has openly or covertly a religious root. For religion is the state of being grasped by the power of being itself."
Discussion in literature
J.R.R. Tolkien identified in his 1936 lecture "Beowulf: The Monsters and the Critics" a "Northern 'theory of courage'"—the heroic or "virtuous pagan" insistence to do the right thing even in the face of certain defeat without promise of reward or salvation: Virtuous pagan heroism or courage in this sense is "trusting in your own strength," as observed by Jacob Grimm in his Teutonic Mythology,Civil courage
Civil courage (sometimes also referred to as "Social courage") is defined by many different standards, but the term is usually referred to when civilians stand up against something that is deemed unjust and evil, knowing that the consequences of their action might lead to their death, injury, or any other negative effect.In many countries, such as Brazil, France and Germany, civil
courage is enforced by law; this means that if a crime is committed
in public, the public is obliged to act, either by alerting the
authorities, or by intervening in the conflict. If the crime is
committed in a private environment, those who witness the crime are
either to report it, or try to stop it.
Symbolism
Its accompanying animal is the lion. Often, Fortitude is depicted as having tamed the ferocious lion. Cf. e.g. the Tarot trump called Strength. It is sometimes seen as a depiction of the Catholic Church's triumph over sin. It also is a symbol in some cultures as a savior of the people who live in a community with sin and a corrupt church or religious body.Footnotes
References
- Catholic Encyclopedia "Fortitude"
- Summa Theologica "Second Part of the Second Part" See Questions 123-140
- Ernest Becker, The Denial of Death (New York: The Free Press, 1973).
- Douglas N. Walton, Courage: A philosophical investigation (Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1986).
- Stephen Palmquist, Angst and the Paradox of Courage (2000) http://www.hkbu.edu.hk/~ppp/tp4/top12.html
bravery in German: Tapferkeit
bravery in Spanish: Valor
bravery in Esperanto: Kuraĝo
bravery in French: Courage
bravery in Interlingua (International Auxiliary
Language Association): Corage
bravery in Italian: Coraggio
bravery in Hebrew: אומץ
bravery in Dutch: Moed
bravery in Norwegian: Mot
bravery in Japanese: 勇気
bravery in Polish: Męstwo
bravery in Portuguese: Coragem
bravery in Russian: Доблесть
bravery in Swedish: Mod
bravery in Ukrainian: Хоробрість
bravery in Vlaams: Kroaizje
bravery in Chinese: 勇氣
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Dutch courage, Sunday best, boldness, braveness, chiffon, chivalrousness, chivalry, clinquant, conspicuous
gallantry, courage,
courageousness,
daring, determination, doughtiness, fearlessness, festoons, finery, firmness, folderol, foofaraw, fortitude, frilliness, frilling, frills, frills and furbelows,
frippery, froufrou, full dress, fuss, gaiety, gallantness, gallantry, gallantry under
fire, gaudery, gilding, gilt, gingerbread, greatheartedness,
heroicalness,
heroism, indomitability, intrepidity, intrepidness, knightliness, lionheartedness,
machismo, manfulness, manhood, manliness, martial spirit,
military spirit, paste,
pinchbeck, pluck, pot-valor, prowess, regalia, resoluteness, resolution, soldierly
quality, stalwartness, staunchness, stoutheartedness,
stoutness, superfluity, tinsel, trappings, trickery, trumpery, valiance, valiancy, valor, valorousness, virtue, war paint