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    Aristotle holds that eudaimonia—the deepest human flouris... — Carmelics
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    Challenges→The passions are the strongest source of pleasure for human beings

    Aristotle holds that eudaimonia—the deepest human flourishing—arises from virtuous activity in accordance with reason, not from passionate intensity.

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    1 reason for
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    Reasons For

    1 perspective
    Reason for
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    • 1.Reason provides stable, reliable guidance across contexts, while passion fluctuates based on circumstances and bodily states.
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    • 2.Virtuous activity requires deliberation and judgment about means and ends, capacities unique to reason rather than emotion.
      ?

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    • 3.Eudaimonia means fulfilling our distinctive human function; reason differentiates humans from other animals more than passion does.
      ?

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    Reasons Against

    1 perspective
    Reason against
    ?
    • 1.Some of life's deepest goods—love, aesthetic experience, moral outrage—involve passionate intensity that reason alone cannot generate.
      ?

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    • 2.Virtue without emotional engagement becomes hollow; courage requires fear transformed, not reason devoid of passionate commitment.
      ?

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    • 3.Aristotle himself identifies passionate emotions like proper anger and appropriate joy as components of virtue, not obstacles to it.
      ?

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    2 topics

    Consciousness & Mind1 linkedVirtue Ethics1 linked

    Related

    Aristotle himself identifies passionate emotions like proper anger and appropria...Eudaimonia means fulfilling our distinctive human function; reason differentiate...Reason provides stable, reliable guidance across contexts, while passion fluctua...Some of life's deepest goods—love, aesthetic experience, moral outrage—involve p...
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    The passions are the strongest source of pleasure for human beingsVirtue without emotional engagement becomes hollow; courage requires fear transf...Virtuous activity requires deliberation and judgment about means and ends, capac...

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    Perspectives
    2 (1 for, 1 against)
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