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  2. Dec 19, 2013 · Aristotle says that living well is the final end for humans; it is not a means to anything else. Aristotle thinks this is obvious because few people want to live poorly. But now another question arises: don’t people differ about what constitutes a good life?

    • Aristotle’s View of The Good Life
    • Its Superiority to Other Kinds of Life
    • Its Curability Through Training
    • Its Relation to Eudaimonia
    • Its Dependence on Other Goods

    Aristotle’s views of the good life are largely in agreement with the beliefs of Epicurus and Socrates. According to these philosophers, the good life requires virtue and morality, but a human’s happiness should be based on the pursuit of a variety of pleasant experiences. As such, Aristotle’s view of the good life is very objective. People who live...

    Aristotle’s works include treatises on the natural sciences and other special subjects. These include cosmology, biology, psychology, and the philosophy of science. His writings are widely read and are still relevant to today’s philosophical discussions. Although he is credited with creating the concept of the good life, it is still controversial w...

    According to Aristotle, a good life is one in which the individual is satisfied and happy. Many people interpret happiness in subjectivist terms, arguing that a person’s happiness is based on his or her own state of mind. However, Aristotle’s definition of happiness is objective and explains the reasons for our joy. In Aristotle’s view, a happy lif...

    The term ‘eudaimonia’ consists of two parts: daimon (divinity) and eudaimon (spirit). According to Aristotle, eudaimonia means living well, favored by god. Despite its etymology, Aristotle viewed it as a synonym of eu zen, which is a definition of happiness. Aristotle’s good life is the pursuit of virtues, which are morally ‘good’ ways of living a ...

    Aristotle’s argument that the good life is interdependent with other goods raises questionsabout the morality of pursuing virtue alone. Aristotle treats the desire to do good for others as a natural phenomenon and argues that it is compatible with one’s own happiness. The practical wisdom of pursuing virtue alone is incompatible with the virtuous a...

  3. Jul 5, 2023 · In Aristotle’s opinion, we can all live a good life through finding a healthy mean between extremes that drive us, and practicing these character traits regularly.

  4. Sep 21, 2022 · Aristotle thought eudaimonia (often translated as “happiness” or “well-being”) is the goal of human existence. “Happiness is the meaning and the purpose of life, the whole aim and end of ...

  5. Jul 3, 2023 · Aristotle wrote that the purpose of all humans is to live a certain kind of life, something commentators have called “the good life.” For Aristotle, the notion of a good life is intertwined...

  6. May 1, 2001 · Aristotle follows Socrates and Plato in taking the virtues to be central to a well-lived life. Like Plato, he regards the ethical virtues (justice, courage, temperance and so on) as complex rational, emotional and social skills.

  7. In Book I of the Nicomachean Ethics, Aristotle gives us a broad view of what he thinks it means to live a good life. For Aristotle, the good life is one in which we develop and exercise the distinctive human ability to think and act rationally. Such a life, on Aristotle’s view, is a happy or flourishing life.