Aristotle Ultimate Happiness

aristotle ultimate happiness
What exactly is happiness? How do we know where to look, even for him?

Happiness is the meaning and purpose of the life, the purpose and goal of all human existence. – While Aristotle happiness itself is sought for its own sake, every other goal – health, beauty, money or power – is valued only because it is expected to make us happy. – Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi Many of today's children are pampered, praised, and to believe that the universe revolves around them, that their happiness is the highest priority. For them, happiness is on leisure and pleasure, and minimizing effort. Do you think there will be a proliferation of depression in adolescence and become adults realize how shallow their lives and how unhappy they are? How can you teach people to be happy when no one can agree on what it is? The absence of poverty is not happy is it? That is neutral!

I must say its very refreshing Julia to chat with a woman who looks like a dog, but has an exceptional brain! In fact, all that comes our wrong to ignore that. I think we all define happiness differently because we are all unique in our presence, we are all superimposed on the ideas, of course, but even this is a broad brush stroke. For example, eating a little chicken would make us both happy, but I do not like tarragon and may therefore although the two are enjoying the chickness the essence of an herb eliminates mine. And then I like red wine and you may prefer a white, so I think happiness is very subjective. Young people today are pure in heart hedonists who have been force-fed like geese in France that money, fame and an easy life leads to happiness, but unfortunately until the BS as we see in any magazine, thesis even brilliant things people miserable. Like the old swing-Ometer test the right to be happy if the site is neutral on the left to be unhappy that all revolve around If "No", then how do you define each other, define long-short short-term defined.

Audiobook: Nicomachean Ethics (Unabridged) by Aristotle


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