Confidence
Having now seen the nature of fear, and of
the things that cause it, and the various states of mind in which it is felt,
we can also see what Confidence is, about what things we feel it, and under
what conditions. It is the opposite of fear, and what causes it is the opposite
of what causes fear; it is, therefore, the expectation associated with a mental
picture of the nearness of what keeps us safe and the absence or remoteness of
what is terrible: it may be due either to the near presence of what inspires
confidence or to the absence of what causes alarm. We feel it if we can take
steps -- many, or important, or both -- to cure or prevent trouble; if we have
neither wronged others nor been wronged by them; if we have either no rivals at
all or no strong ones; if our rivals who are strong are our friends or have
treated us well or been treated well by us; or if those whose interest is the
same as ours are the more numerous party, or the stronger, or both.
As for our own state of mind, we feel confidence
if we believe we have often succeeded and never suffered reverses, or have
often met danger and escaped it safely. For there are two reasons why human
beings face danger calmly: they may have no experience of it, or they may have
means to deal with it: thus when in danger at sea people may feel confident
about what will happen either because they have no experience of bad weather,
or because their experience gives them the means of dealing with it. We also
feel confident whenever there is nothing to terrify other people like
ourselves, or people weaker than ourselves, or people than whom we believe
ourselves to be stronger -- and we believe this if we have conquered them, or
conquered others who are as strong as they are, or stronger. Also if we believe
ourselves superior to our rivals in the number and importance of the advantages
that make men formidable -- [1383b] wealth,
physical strength, strong bodies of supporters, extensive territory, and the
possession of all, or the most important, appliances of war. Also if we have
wronged no one, or not many, or not those of whom we are afraid; and generally,
if our relations with the gods are satisfactory, as will be shown especially by
signs and oracles. The fact is that anger makes us confident -- that anger is
excited by our knowledge that we are not the wrongers but the wronged, and that
the divine power is always supposed to be on the side of the wronged. Also
when, at the outset of an enterprise, we believe that we cannot and shall not
fail, or that we shall succeed completely. -- So much for the causes of fear
and confidence.