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An Essay On Aristotle 's Philosophy Of Happiness

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An Essay on Aristotle’s Philosophy of Happiness

Priya Shah
211620523
Sosc 2570, Tutorial 04 R 11:30-12:30
Oct 22, 2014

Kurosawa’s Ikiru (1952) portrays a powerful representation of what it means to live a full life. In this film we witness a strong correlation with Aristotle’s philosophy of happiness and virtue. In this paper, we will examine both the film and Aristotle’s meaning of true happiness and critically analyze how both are related. Aristotle’s views on happiness can be complex, and is no easy approach when it comes to obtaining it which will be discussed in this paper thru the works of Aristotle in The Nicomachean Ethics and Vanier’s Made for Happiness along side Ikiru’s characters and plot. Aristotle illustrates happiness or eudomania in his early writings. He saw happiness as the “virtuous activity of the soul in accordance to reason” and it being “the highest end of our desires”. To be happy, one must pursue activities that are directed towards the good, both for oneself or society as a whole. One’s actions therefore leads to a higher purpose. Happiness however, is not just limited to what is within ourselves, it also has much to do with other goods such as pleasure, wealth and honour. Without these goods, one is never truly happy because it is lacking the necessary goods in his life. One uses these goods as a reasoning for our actions by focusing on the idea that “the good is that to which all

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