Happiness as it Relates to Morality

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Happiness as it relates to morality

The word philosophy was coined by the noble Greek men as “the love of wisdom”. In approximately 400 B.C., Greek men began to discover their unhappiness with supernatural and mythical explanations of reality-the only explanations presented to them at the era. The noblemen began to deduce that there was a coherent or logical order to the universe. Philosophers such as Aristotle, Plato and Socrates began an in-depth exploration of this theory of a rational and orderly world. Socrates was perhaps the most noble and wisest Athenian to have ever lived. He was a moral citizen on the constant quest for happiness, an conceived the term “eudaimonia”, which means happiness by nature that arises from fulfillment of our function as humans, in other words living “the god life”. Happiness and morality go hand in hand, as a good life consists of moral virtue, which standards of behavior. According to many philosophers, however, true ‘morality’ does not include selfishness or making exceptions in one’s own favor just because it suits one to do so. A vigilant execute theory test is necessary to explore the affiliations between morality and happiness, with the premise that the majority people that are moral are indeed happy, and that only moral beings can be truthfully be contented because the good soul will live well, and to live well is to be happy.

Many philosophers, as well as myself, are of the view that only moral person can truly be happy. There is some truth to that, as Haidt’s survey shows that self-reported happiest people in the United States are Orthodox Jews and Evangelical Christians. His studies show that these two groups live in an order (83 of which text). In this society as long as one abides...

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...however, I believe I will find perfect harmony.

The research proves that a person is happiest internally, and that happiness is their prize for virtue. There is, however, happiness for the immoral, but it is only external. The happiness that Socrates, Plato and Aristotle spoke of is the expression of complete virtue in all activities, with an adequate supply of external goods, not just for any time but a complete lifetime.

Work cited

Annas, Julia. An Introduction To Plato’s Republic. New York: Oxford University Press,

1981.

Boss, Judith A. Ethics for life: A Text with Reading 4th Ed… New York: The McGraw- Hill Companies, INC, 2008

Haidt, Jonathan. The Happiness Hypothesis: Finding Modern Truth in Ancient Wisdom.

New York: Basic Books, 2006.

Solomon, Robert C. The little Philosophy Book. New York: Oxford University Press,

INC, 2008

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