Durable Goods : Pleasure, Wealth and Power in the Virtuous Life (Studies in Theoretical and Applied Ethics .10) (2013. X, 177 S. 225 mm)

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Durable Goods : Pleasure, Wealth and Power in the Virtuous Life (Studies in Theoretical and Applied Ethics .10) (2013. X, 177 S. 225 mm)

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  • 製本 Hardcover:ハードカバー版/ページ数 177 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9781433116995

Full Description

Ancient Greek philosophers generally accept the claim that εὐδαιμονία is within our power to achieve, regardless of circumstance. Conversely, external goods - physical health, education, social standing - are frequently present or absent due to circumstances beyond our control. Can eudaimonism explain how more than a privileged elite can attain εὐδαιμονία when so few enjoy the requisite external goods?
A satisfactory account of the relation between external goods and well-being must accommodate both the insight that there is an essential connection between prosperity and the flourishing life and that there is a real sense in which εὐδαιμονία is a self-sufficient concept. The «applied intellectualist» interpretation of eudaimonism defended here accommodates important insights of several ancient Greek traditions: Aristotle's account of human nature, specifically the role of external goods as necessary preconditions for leading a human life; Socratic and Stoic analysis that external goods are necessary constituents of moral action; and Plato's commitment to a criterion for judging the compatibility of external prosperity with a life of εὐδαιμονία.
This text provides a comprehensive linguistic and ethical analysis of key terms and arguments across several centuries of ancient Greek ethical thought on this fascinating topic, making it an excellent foundation for an upper-division undergraduate seminar in ancient Greek ethics, virtue ethics, or applied ethics.

Contents

Contents: The Humanist: Socrates in the Real World - The Idealist: Plato in the Realm of Forms - The Philosopher: Aristotle in Two Worlds - The Hard-Liners: The Stoics Bite the Bullet - Applied Intellectualism: Eudaimonist Synthesis.