To Kill a Mockingbird

how does scout understand courage differently) by the end of the book

Evidence and explination

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Scout understands courage with more wisdom and maturity than she had at the beginning of the book. She begins to see that courage personified by her father. Courage is standing up for what is right even in the face of overwhelming opposition; courage is risking personal loss over an idea; courage is believing that an individual can make a difference in the lives of others; courage is choosing empathy when hate is much easier. Scout experiences all of these over the course of the novel.