Previously published as Ethics, Aristotle's The Nicomachean Ethics addresses the question of how to live well and originates the concept of cultivating a virtuous character as the basis of his ethical system. Here Aristotle sets out to examine the nature of happiness, and argues that happiness consists in 'activity of the soul in accordance with virtue', including moral virtues, such as courage, generosity and justice, and intellectual virtues, such as knowledge, wisdom and insight. The Ethics also discusses the nature of practical reasoning, the value and the objects of pleasure, the different forms of friendship, and the relationship between individual virtue, society and the State. Aristotle's work has had a profound and lasting influence on all subsequent Western thought about ethical matters.
The Living Thoughts Of Kierkegaard
W.H. Auden
Indiana Unversity Press
Of Life And Other Worlds
Aart Jurriaanse
World Unity & Service Trust
Emerson Prospect And Retrospect
Porte Joel
Harvard University Press/Harper Collins Publishers Limited
Emotion Thought And Therapy
Jorome Neu
Routledge & Kegan Paul Ltd
Concordia The Roots Of European Thought
Stephen R. Hill
Duckworth Gerald
Burke
C.B. Macpherson
Hill And Wang
The Triangular Pattern Of Life
Donna Hitz
Philosophical Library
The Roots Of Peace
Viva Emmons
A Quest Book
Man God And The Universe
I.K. Taimni
The Dawning Of The Theosophical Movement
Michael Gomes
Fill up your details to notify you when this book will be available