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The Nature and Value of Happiness

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

The Nature and Value of Happiness provides a historic and contemporary overview of the philosophy of happiness, with critical evaluations to help students analyze the material and trace the evolution of a deeply nuanced concept. Addressing how the modern notion of happiness has changed from its ancient origins, Christine Vitrano attempts to clarify the precise value of happiness. This search leads Vitrano to examine topics such as if happiness requires morality or whether happiness can be considered the greatest good or simply one good among many. The philosophical theories are presented in a way that is accessible to anyone interested in learning about happiness, regardless of previous philosophical study. All technical terms and concepts are clearly explained, and illustrative examples tied into the text bring the material to life and help establish the relevance of the subject to readers. The ultimate goal is to reach a definition of the nature of happiness that best reflects the way we use the word today. This book is a welcome addition to the growing literature on happiness and is ideal for initiating provocative discussions in courses on happiness and ethics.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      June 10, 2013
      Vitrano, an assistant professor of philosophy at Brooklyn College, turns a scholarly eye on a subject that fascinates us all: happiness. But rather than penning a how-to guide to feeling better, she examines the concepts and hypotheses concerning happiness offered by famous philosophers of old, including usual suspects Plato and Aristotle, as well as thinkers of the modern era, like Jeremy Bentham and John Stuart Mill; then she challenges them. Hedonism on its own doesn’t produce happiness, she points out, but then again neither does satisfying certain desires. Practicing righteous moral behavior isn’t even a surefire way to be happy—sometimes charity can be misunderstood, and of course everyone knows what the road to hell is paved with. For the most part, the text reads like a philosopher’s graduate thesis, and endnotes spring up like so many weeds at the sidewalk’s end. But Vitrano saves her simplest—and perhaps most profound—observation for the very end: “If over the course of your life you fail to appreciate what you have, you will never be happy. But if you can find satisfaction in your situation, whatever it may be, then happiness will be yours.”

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  • OverDrive Read
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  • English

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