Aristotle's Happiness

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Aristotle makes a conclusion that to be happy, one must have both complete virtue and a complete life (page 12). Pathways to happiness can only be a natural good. A natural good is the result of a human action in which the end result of that action is pursued in its own right (page 7). Happiness is the ultimate goal of human life and virtue is one of the highest achieved goods. To be happy, one must also have a complete life, meaning a life without misery. One can be virtuous and still be unhappy if their life is full of misfortune.
The ultimate good is happiness. His reasoning behind this is that most people would agree that being happy is the highest achievable good in life. Since many people have different ideas on how to be happy, Aristotle

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