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    Trivial and ignoble pleasures are sought by those who are... — Carmelics
    Home/Virtue Ethics
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    Supports→Those who seek trivial or ignoble pleasures fall short of the highest natural human fulfillment.

    Trivial and ignoble pleasures are sought by those who are stunted in their capacities for higher activities.

    Virtue Ethics
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    Those who seek trivial or ignoble pleasures fall short of the highest ...85%Stunted capacity for higher activities results from failure to develop...75%Most people are susceptible to sensual gratification74%Each activity, when unimpeded and perfected, gives rise to its own spe...74%

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    Aristotle’s account of life as a teleologically and hierarchically unified system of biological capacities allowed him to give a unified account of pleasure while discriminating systematically among different kinds and instances according to their ranks in his value-laden hierarchy of life capacities and their functionings. Each activity, when unimpeded and perfected, on his view, gives rise to its own specific ‘supervenient’ (arising from a preexisting ground) pleasure, differentiated in kind f

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