INI201H1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 13: Nicomachean Ethics, Eudaimonia, Arthur Schopenhauer

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6 Apr 2020
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In nicomachean ethics, aristotle describes happiness as the chief good, as "that which all things aim at. " Happiness is what we "choose always for its own sake. " Aristotle, happiness "is not just an end, but a perfect end. " The perfect end is the end of all ends, the good that is good always for its own sake . If happiness is the end of all ends, then all other things become means to happiness. Returning to aristotle, his model of happiness relies on habituation, "the result of the repeated doing of acts which have a similar or common quality. " Good habits involve work: we have to work on the body such that the body"s immediate reactions, how we are impressed upon by the world, will take us in the "right" direction. Basically, well-being (eudaimonia) is gained by proper development of one"s highest and most human capabilities and human beings are "the rational animal. "

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