
You Are Heroic with Brian Johnson +1: #465 Virtuous Activity of the Soul
Jul 14, 2018
03:53
In our last +1, we talked about Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics and the fact that his word for "happiness" was VERY different than our word. Eudaimonia, as we discussed, literally means "good soul" and implies a powerful sense of actualizing our potential—succeeding in expressing the best within ourselves. Today we're going to focus on HOW Aristotle teaches us to create THAT type of "happiness." Pop quiz: Can you guess? … Pop answer: In a word: Virtue. In a Greek word: Areté. Aristotle tells us that the ONLY way to have a "good soul" and experience the deepest sense of well-being and happiness is to, essentially, express the best version of yourself moment to moment to moment. To live with virtue. Here's how he puts it: "But what is happiness? If we consider what the function of man is, we find that happiness is a virtuous activity of the soul."
- "Virtuous activity of the soul."
- "Virtuous activity of the soul."
