Happiness in Nicomachean Ethics

Authors

  • George Cosmin Colang Bioterra University of Bucharest

Keywords:

Happiness, good, virtue, estate, method, activity, pleasure, eudaimonia

Abstract

In the following work, I will try to trace, in general lines, the way in which the matter of happiness is perceived in The Nicomachean Ethics. At the same time, I will also touch on the subject of the perspectives that emerge and reflect from the considered work. For that matter, I will follow the way in which Aristotle has enunciated the matter, so that then call into requisition various perspectives in order to emphasize that happiness can’t be pursued or methodically conceived. Even though the matter is methodically transposed and traced, the simple browsing makes it emerge from the directions established in the initial program. What I am here pleading for is that the work doesn’t have an amphibological structure, not because it respects by itself certain norms demanded by the logics’ common sense, but because it couldn’t be conceived in exclusively logic terms. If we follow Aristotle’s ethic, we will see, without difficulty, that the work’s purpose is practical. From where we can easily indicate that the need to methodically articulate the ethic’s program is no longer necessary by itself.

Author Biography

George Cosmin Colang, Bioterra University of Bucharest

PhD Lecturer, Bioterra University of Bucharest, Bucharest, Romania

References

Aristotle. (2004). Nicomachean Ethics. Cambridge University Press.

Aristotle. (2020). The Nicomachean ethics. Penguin Random House.

Bostock, D. (2000). Aristotle’s Ethics. Oxford University Press.

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Kenny, A. (1995). Aristotle on the Perfect Life. Oxford University Press.

Kontos, P. (2002). L’action morale chez Aristote. Presses Universitaires de France.

Kraut, R. (1989). Aristotle on the Human Good. Princeton University Press.

Mureşan, V. (2007). Comentariu la Etica Nicomahică. Humanitas

Mureşan, V. (2011). Etica lui Aristotel. Editura Universităţii din Bucureşti.

Pakaluk, M. (2005). Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics – An Introduction. Cambridge University Press.

Toner, C. (2006). Aristotelian Well-Being: A Response to L. W. Sumner's Critique. Utilitas, 18(3), 218-231. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0953820806002007

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Published

2021-06-30

How to Cite

Colang, G. C. . (2021). Happiness in Nicomachean Ethics. Theleologicae International Journal of Postmodern Studies, 1(1), 1–7. Retrieved from http://epejournals.com/index.php/tijps/article/view/9