| The excerpt represents the core issue or deciding factor on which you must meditate, and is drawn from Phaedrus by Plato: train of some god, from whom she derived her character, she beheld
partially and imperfectly the vision of absolute truth.  All her after
existence, passed in many forms of men and animals, is spent in regaining
this.  The stages of the conflict are many and various; and she is sorely
let and hindered by the animal desires of the inferior or concupiscent
steed.  Again and again she beholds the flashing beauty of the beloved. 
But before that vision can be finally enjoyed the animal desires must be
subjected.
 The moral or spiritual element in man is represented by the immortal steed
which, like thumos in the Republic, always sides with the reason.  Both are
dragged out of their course by the furious impulses of desire.  In the end
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