Eudaimonia (Q1771260)

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Aristotelian term for happiness or welfare
  • eudaemonia
  • eudaimonic life
  • eu zên ("living well")
  • eu zen ("living well")
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Language Label Description Also known as
English
Eudaimonia
Aristotelian term for happiness or welfare
  • eudaemonia
  • eudaimonic life
  • eu zên ("living well")
  • eu zen ("living well")

Statements

eudaimonia (English)
eudaemonia
Ευδαιμονία (Greek)
εὖ ζῆν
1 reference
εὖ ζῆν
eũ zē̃n
eu zên
2. The Human Good and the Function Argument / Aristotle thinks everyone will agree that the terms “eudaimonia” (“happiness”) and “eu zên” (“living well”) designate such an end. ... He regards “eudaimon” as a mere substitute for eu zên (“living well”). ... (English)
1 reference
εὖ ζῆν (Greek)
[48b] ... / Socrates / That is true. But, my friend, the argument we have just finished seems to me still much the same as before; and now see whether we still hold to this, or not, that it is not living, but living well which we ought to consider most important. (English)
Eudaimonia
0 references

Identifiers

eudaimonia / Greek philosophy
Brian Duignan
1 reference
eudaimonia, also spelled eudaemonia, in Aristotelian ethics, the condition of human flourishing or of living well. (English)
0 references
 
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