This is a powerful article that i picked from The Art of Manliness site. I have highlighted what thought were stellar insights.
By Brett & Kate McKay
What
 is a man? What sort of man should I be? What does it mean to live a 
good life? What is the best way to live and how do I attain excellence? 
What should I aim for, and what training and practices must I do to 
achieve those aims?
Such questions have been asked for thousands 
of years. Few men have grappled with them more, and provided keener 
insight to the answers, than the philosophers of ancient Greece. In 
particular, Plato’s vision of the tripartite nature of the soul, or 
psyche, as explained though the allegory of the chariot, is something I 
have returned to throughout my life. It furnishes an unmatched symbol of
 what a man is, can be, and what he must do to bridge those two points 
and attain andreia (manliness), arête (excellence), and finally eudaimonia (full human flourishing).
Today
 we will discuss that allegory and its meaning. While an understanding 
of the whole allegory and the pondering of it can bring great insight, 
the ultimate goal of this article is in fact to lay the foundation for 
two more posts to come in which we will uncover the nature of the one 
component of Plato’s vision of the soul that has almost entirely been 
lost to modern men: thumos.
The Allegory of the Chariot
In the Phaedrus,
 Plato (through his mouthpiece, Socrates) shares the allegory of the 
chariot to explain the tripartite nature of the human soul or psyche.
 
The chariot is pulled by two winged horses, one mortal and the other immortal.
 
The
 mortal horse is deformed and obstinate. Plato describes the horse as a 
“crooked lumbering animal, put together anyhow…of a dark color, with 
grey eyes and blood-red complexion; the mate of insolence and pride, 
shag-eared and deaf, hardly yielding to whip and spur.”
 
The 
immortal horse, on the other hand, is noble and game, “upright and 
cleanly made…his color is white, and his eyes dark; he is a lover of 
honor and modesty and temperance, and the follower of true glory; he 
needs no touch of the whip, but is guided by word and admonition only.”
 
In
 the driver’s seat is the charioteer, tasked with reining in these 
disparate steeds, guiding and harnessing them to propel the vehicle with
 strength and efficiency. The charioteer’s destination? The ridge of 
heaven, beyond which he may behold the Forms: essences of things like 
Beauty, Wisdom, Courage, Justice, Goodness — everlasting Truth and 
absolute Knowledge. These essences nourish the horses’ wings, keeping 
the chariot in flight.
 
The charioteer joins a procession of gods,
 led by Zeus, on this trip into the heavens. Unlike human souls, the 
gods have two immortal horses to pull their chariots and are able to 
easily soar above. Mortals, on the other hand, have a much more 
turbulent ride. The white horse wishes to rise, but the dark horse 
attempts to pull the chariot back towards the earth. As the horses pull 
in opposing directions, and the charioteer attempts to get them into 
sync, his chariot bobs above the ridge of heaven then down again, and he
 catches glimpses of the great beyond before sinking once more.
 
If
 the charioteer is able to behold the Forms, he gets to go on another 
revolution around the heavens. But if he cannot successfully pilot the 
chariot, the horses’ wings wither from lack of nourishment, or break off
 when the horses collide and attack each other, or crash into the 
chariots of others. The chariot then plummets to earth, the horses lose 
their wings, and the soul becomes embodied in human flesh. The degree to
 which the soul falls, and the “rank” of the mortal being it must then 
be embodied in is based on the amount of Truth it beheld while in the 
heavens. Rather like the idea of reincarnation. The degree of the fall 
also determines how long it takes for the horses to regrow their wings 
and once again take flight. Basically, the more Truth the charioteer 
beheld on his journey, the shallower his fall, and the easier it is for 
him to get up and get going again. The regrowth of the wings is hastened
 by the mortal soul encountering people and experiences that contain 
touches of divinity, and recall to his memory the Truth he beheld in his
 preexistence. Plato describes such moments as looking “through the 
glass dimly” and they hasten the soul’s return to the heavens.
 Interpreting the Allegory
Plato’s
 allegory of the chariot can be interpreted on a number of levels – as 
symbolic of the path to becoming godlike, spiritual transcendence, 
personal progress and attainment of “Superhuman” status, or psychological health. There is much one can ponder about it. Below we delve into several of the main points.
The Tripartite Soul
The chariot, charioteer, and white and dark horses symbolize the soul, and its three main components.
 
The
 Charioteer represents man’s Reason, the dark horse his appetites, and 
the white horse his thumos. We’ll explore the nature of thumos in-depth 
next time, but for now, you can read it simply as “spiritedness.” 
Another way to label the three elements of soul are as the lover of 
wisdom (charioteer), the lover of gain (dark horse), and the lover of 
victory (white horse). 
Aristotle described the three elements as the 
contemplative, hedonistic, and political, or, knowledge, pleasure, and 
honor.
 
The Greeks saw these 
elements of soul as physical, almost independent entities, not so much 
with bodies, but as real forces, like electricity that could move a man 
to act and think in certain ways. Each element has its own motivations 
and desires: reason seeks truth and knowledge, the appetites seek food, 
drink, sex, and material wealth, and thumos seeks glory, honor, and 
recognition. Plato believed reason has the highest aims, followed by 
thumos, and then the appetites. But each soul force, if properly 
harnessed and employed, can help a man become eudaimon.
 
Reason’s
 job, with the aid of thumos, is to discern the best aims to pursue, and
 then train his “horses” to work together towards those aims. As the 
charioteer, he must have vision and purpose – he must know where he is 
going — and he must understand the nature and desires of his two horses 
if he wishes to properly harness their energies. A charioteer can err by
 either failing to hitch one of the horses to the chariot altogether, or
 by failing to bridle the horse, and instead letting him run wild. In 
the latter case, Plato argued, “the best part [Reason] is naturally weak
 in a man so that it cannot govern and control the brood of beasts 
within him but can only serve them and can learn nothing but the ways of
 flattering them.”
 
Obtaining Harmony of Soul
The
 masterful charioteer does not ignore his own motivations, nor the 
desires of thumos and appetite, but neither does he let his two horses 
run wild. He lets Reason rule, takes stock of all his desires, 
identifies his best and truest ones – those that lead to virtue and 
truth — and guides his horses towards them. He does not ignore or 
indulge them – he harnesses them. Each horse has its strengths 
and weaknesses, and the white horse can lead a man into the wrong path 
just as the dark horse can, but when properly trained, thumos becomes 
the ally of the charioteer. Together, reason and thumos work to pull the
 appetites into sync.
Instead of having “civil war amongst them,”
 the deft charioteer understands each role the three forces of his soul 
play, and he guides them in carrying out that role without either 
entirely usurping their role, nor allowing them to interfere with each 
other. He achieves harmony amongst the elements. Thus, instead of 
dissipating his energies in contradictory and detrimental directions, he
 channels those energies towards his goals.
Achieving this harmony of soul, Plato argues, is a precursor to tackling any other endeavor of life:
 “having first attained to self-mastery and beautiful order within himself, and having harmonized these three principles, the notes or intervals of three terms quite literally the lowest, the highest, and the mean, and all others there may be between them, and having linked and bound all three together and made of himself a unit, one man instead of many, self-controlled and in unison, he should then and then only turn to practice if he find aught to do either in the getting of wealth or the tendance of the body or it may be in political action or private business, in all such doings believing and naming the just and honorable action to be that which preserves and helps to produce this condition of soul.”
The foundational nature of gaining mastery over one’s soul, Plato continues,
 “is the chief reason why it should be our main concern that each of us, neglecting all other studies, should seek after and study this thing—if in any way he may be able to learn of and discover the man who will give him the ability and the knowledge to distinguish the life that is good from that which is bad, and always and everywhere to choose the best that the conditions allow.”
A man that makes this 
pursuit his aim, and allows it to guide all his thoughts and actions, 
“will gladly take part in and enjoy those which he thinks will make him a
 better man, but in public and private life he will shun those that may 
overthrow the established habit of his soul.”
Taking Flight and Progressing in Our Journey
As
 you’ll remember, in the allegory of the chariot, the chariot falls from
 the heavens when the horses do not receive adequate nourishment from 
the Forms, or when the horses rebel and the charioteer does a poor job 
of directing them. They lose their wings, and must stay on earth until 
they regrow – a process which is hastened by remembering what one saw 
before the fall.
 
Plato believed that discovering all truth was not a process of learning, but of remembering
 what one once knew. His philosophy may be interpreted literally as 
saying we had a preexistence before this life. But it also has meaning 
in a more figurative sense. We get off track in becoming the men we wish
 to be when we succumb to vice (being overpowered by the dark horse), 
and we tend to succumb to vice when we forget who we are, who we want to
 be, and the insights into those two pieces of knowledge we have already
 attained and experienced. Doing things that remind us of the truths we 
hold dear keeps us “in flight” and progressing with our lives.
For more on this important subject, I highly recommend reading: Hold Fast: How Forgetfulness Torpedos Your Journey to Becoming the Man You Want to Be, and Remembrance Is the Antidote
 Understanding the Dark Horse
In
 order to train and harness the power latent in the forces of his soul, a
 man must understand the nature of his “horses” and how to utilize their
 strengths and rein in their weaknesses.
A
 man’s dark horse, or appetites, are not difficult to understand; you 
have probably felt its primal pull towards money, sex, food, and drink 
many times in your life.
But despite our intimate acquaintance 
with our appetites, or perhaps because of it, the dark horse is not easy
 to properly train and make use of. Doing so requires achieving moderation, or as Aristotle would put it, finding the “golden mean” between extremes.
A
 man who lets his appetites run completely wild is the unabashed 
hedonist. He does not seek to rein in the dark horse at all, letting him
 pull the chariot after whichever pleasure crosses its path. This is the
 man who lives for nothing higher than to eat good food, get drunk, have
 sex, and make money. He seeks after effeminizing luxury with abandon 
and will do anything to get it. With no check to his behavior, the 
result can be a giant gut, pickled brains, massive debt, and a prison 
sentence for corruption.
A 
life wholly dedicated to the satisfaction of one’s bodily and pecuniary 
pleasures make man no different than the animals. Aristotle called such a
 life bovine, and Plato argued that the result of letting oneself be 
dominated by his appetites “is the ruthless enslavement of the divinest 
part of himself to the most despicable and godless part.” Such a man, 
Plato submitted, should be “deemed wretched.”
On
 the other end of the spectrum is the man who sees his physical desires 
as wholly wrong or sinful – troublesome or evil stumbling blocks on the 
path to spiritual purity or enlightenment. This man seeks to nullify his
 flesh, and cut off its cravings for pleasure entirely. This is the man 
who spends so much of his life thinking of sex as sinful, that he can’t 
turn off that association and enjoy it, even after he is married. He 
averts his eyes from women as living porn. Food is merely fuel. He often
 seems flat, sterile, and closed off to others, though often you can 
sense the bottled impulses bubbling beneath the surface that he’s tried 
so hard to deny. And because of the lack of a healthy outlet, that 
bubbling often becomes a toxic stew that will one day burst forth in a 
decidedly unhealthy way.
Plato
 believed that the appetites were the lowest of the forces of the soul, 
and that allowing the dark horse to dominate and enslave you would lead 
to a base, unvirtuous life far from arête and eudaimonia. Yet he also 
argued that the dark horse, if properly trained, imparted just as much 
energy to the pulling of the chariot as the white horse did. The chariot
 that soars highest makes use of both horses side by side. A 
would-be ace charioteer neither entirely indulges his dark horse nor 
wholly cuts him off. He harnesses and directs the energy in a positive 
way.
Between the two extremes
 of unchecked hedonism and the iron-fisted squashing of bodily appetites
 lies a middle way. This is the man who maintains a sense of sensuality and earthiness,
 who makes room for the pleasures of body and money but puts them in 
their proper place, who, as Dr. Robin Meyers puts it, is able to find 
“the virtue in the vice.” He enjoys sex thoroughly, but does so within 
the context of love and commitment. He enjoys good food and drink, 
without mindlessly engorging and imbibing. He appreciates money, and 
that which it can buy, but does not make acquiring it his central aim.
The
 dark horse, when properly trained and directed, can lead one closer, 
not further from the good life. Pleasures satisfied with discretion make
 a man happy and balanced, and keep him feeling healthy and motivated 
enough to tackle his higher goals. And the appetites themselves can lead
 directly to those loftier aims. The desire for money, when kept in 
balance, can lead to success, recognition, and independence. Lust, when 
properly directed, leads a man to love, and Plato believed that 
beholding one’s lover was a central path to recalling the Beauty of the 
Forms, and regrowing one’s wings for another trip into the heavens.
That
 is the nature of the dark horse – a force that can be used for both 
good and ill, depending on the mastery of the charioteer. It is fairly 
easy to grasp, if not always to live. But what of the white horse, 
thumos? That is another matter. There is no word in our modern language 
equivalent to this ancient concept. We have here rendered it 
“spiritedness,” but in truth it encompasses much, much more. It is to 
that subject we will turn next time.
____________
 
You can read the entire Phaedrus online for free here. Plato/Socrates hit the subject from another angle and metaphor – that of a rational man, lion, and hydra-like beast – in Book IX of the
 Republic.
 
Illustration by Ted Slampyak

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