Discipline

To think good thoughts requires effort. This is one of the things that discipline – training – is about.
For other uses, see Discipline (disambiguation).

Discipline is the assertion of over more base desires, and is usually understood to be synonymous with self control. Self-discipline is to some extent a substitute for Motivation. When one uses reason to determine the best course of action that opposes one's desires, which is the opposite of Fun. Virtuous behavior can be described as when one's are aligned with one's aims: to do what one knows is best and to do it gladly. Continent behavior, on the other hand, is when one does what one knows is best, but must do it by opposing one's motivations.[1] Moving from continent to virtuous behavior requires training and some self-discipline.

School discipline

Main article: School discipline

In the liberal West, most schools have moved away from corporal punishment to less physical methods of discipline, with mixed results.

Self-discipline

Main article: Self-control

Self-discipline-what many people call will-power-refers to the ability to persist at difficult or unpleasant tasks until they are completed. People who possess high self-discipline are able to overcome reluctance to begin tasks and stay on track despite distractions. Those with low self-discipline procrastinate and show poor follow-through, often failing to complete tasks-even tasks they want very much to complete.

References

Look up discipline in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Wikiquote has quotations related to: Discipline
  1. Fowers, Blaine J. (2008). From Continence to Virtue: Recovering Goodness, Character Unity, and Character Types for Positive Psychology. Theory & Psychology 18, (5). pp. 629–653.