Plato's
Three Parts of the Soul
Sometimes Plato's division of the psyche
into its three main elements can be easily misunderstood. Some who read
about it for the first time think it is the same as Freud's division
of the psyche into the ego (das Ich), id (das Es), and superego (das
Über-Ich), but it isn't the same as Freud's division. Others think
it's the same as the old adult-parent-child division, but it's not that
either. Nor is it the same as the conscious-subconscious-supraconscious
division.
Plato's identification of these three distinct
elements of a person's inner life is unique, and can be validated by
directly turning inward to one's own experience of the self.
Plato's three elements of the psyche are
- The
appetites, which includes all our myriad desires for various pleasures,
comforts, physical satisfactions, and bodily ease. There are so many
of these appetites that Plato does not bother to enumerate them, but
he does note that they can often be in conflict even with each other.
This element of the soul is represented by the ugly black horse on the
left.
- The
spirited, or hot-blooded, part, i.e., the part that gets angry when
it perceives (for example) an injustice being done. This is the part
of us that loves to face and overcome great challenges, the part that
can steel itself to adversity, and that loves victory, winning, challenge,
and honor. (Note that Plato's use of the term "spirited" here
is not the same as "spiritual." He means "spirited"
in the same sense that we speak of a high-spirited horse, for example,
one with lots of energy and power.) This element of the soul is represented
by the noble white horse on the right.
- The
mind (nous), our conscious awareness, is represented by the charioteer
who is guiding (or who at least should be guiding) the horses and chariot.
This is the part of us that thinks, analyzes, looks ahead, rationally
weighs options, and tries to gauge what is best and truest overall.
I've put together the following little chart
of metaphors to help Plato articulate what each of those three elements
is. For example, if we had to pick some body part to symbolize what each
of those elements is, Plato says that the rational part of the soul is
like the body's head, the spirited part is like the hot blood in the heart,
and the appetitive part would be best represented by the belly and genitals.
(These are Plato's metaphors.) If we had to pick one of the classical
psychologists to represent each of these three parts (this is my metaphor,
obviously, not Plato's), Carl Jung could represent the mind, the part
that loves rationality and ultimate wisdom; Alfred Adler (with his emphasis
on how the drive for power shapes human behavior) could represent the
spirited part; and Sigmund Freud (with his claim that the pleasure principle
drives all human behavior) could represent the appetitive part. Some parts
of this chart are Plato's and only a few are my own. For example, the
notion of somatotypes didn't arise until the 19th century, so I added
that, but Plato discovered the characteristic virtues and vices common
to each of the psyche's elements.
So I offer this little chart only as one more
small aid in trying to make sense of what Plato meant by the three distinct
elements of the soul that he delineated.
One other common misconception: Some think
that Plato believes these three elements of the psyche should be in
balance with each other, i.e., should each have its equal "say"
in a person's life. But that isn't the way Plato sees it. He thinks the
charioteer should be in charge of the whole system, should make
the determining decisions about when to give each horse its rein and when
to hold it back. The whole system should not be governed by the wishes
of the horses (nor by the inertia of the chariot itself, the body) but
by the rational decisions of the charioteer.
Finally, in Plato's vision, neither of the
horses are good or bad in themselves. The appetites, for example, make
great servants, but make very bad masters.
Here's the chart:
The
Three Parts of the Soul
in Plato's Republic and Phaedrus
Parts
of the Soul |
Rational |
Spirited
("Thymos") |
Appetitive |
Chariot
Part |
Charioteer |
White
horse
on Right |
Black
horse
on Left |
Loves |
Truth/Wisdom |
Honor/Victory |
Pleasure/$$ |
The
Virtue |
Wisdom |
Courage |
Temperance |
The
Vice |
Pride/Sloth |
Anger/Envy |
Gluttony/Lust/Greed |
Somatotype |
Ectomorph |
Mesomorph |
Endomorph |
Geographic
Symbol |
Athens |
Sparta |
Egypt/Phoenicia |
Body
Symbol |
Head |
Heart |
Belly/Genitals |
Psychiatrist |
Carl
Jung |
Alfred
Adler |
Sigmund
Freud |
Music
Type |
Cerebral |
Martial |
Lydian/Sensuous |
Class
in Republic |
Guardians |
Auxiliaries/Soldiers |
Merchants |
If you think of other tripartite metaphors
to represent Plato's three elements of the soul. Please feel free to suggest
them to us in the class discussion forum.