The Aristotelian perspective is the most well-known philosophical approach to virtues. According to this approach, courage is flanked by the vices of deficiency (cowardice) and excess (rashness) and can be understood in terms of the values it maintains or protects, with greater risks justified by greater importance of the value at stake. But this is not the only way to understand courage: While some chapters follow a neo-Aristotelian line in their presentation, others also offer Stoic, Confucian, Christian or Thomist, Jewish, and African perspectives, which bring other important insights about courage in personal, political, and spiritual realms to the fore-such as the communal, ethnic, and religious elements of courage.
Other chapters ask what place courage has in healthcare or contemporary career development, and how courage might be applied to ordinary citizens as well as leaders in contemporary liberal democracies. These essays make it clear that reflections on courage are highly salient in the wake of the recent COVID-19 pandemic, ongoing global political unrest, and profound uncertainty about the future, as it is courage that enables people to advance and protect so many human values, whether the risks are physical, psychological, or social.