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We’re told that happiness is a choice and that we are fully responsible for our own lives. This episode questions that assumption and asks whether the good life is really a private achievement. Drawing on virtue ethics, the African philosophy of Ubuntu—“I am because we are”—and the social critiques of thinkers like G. W. F. Hegel and Adam Smith, we examine how trust, dignity, meaningful work, and recognition are social goods no individual can manufacture alone. In contrast to radical individualism associated with Ayn Rand, the argument is that personhood and flourishing are relational achievements. You are responsible for your character and conduct—but not for conditions you did not choose. If happiness depends on the health of a community, then the question is no longer just “Am I responsible for my own happiness?” but “What do we owe each other for the good life to be possible at all?”
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Question Everything!
By Matt RupertSend us Fan Mail
We’re told that happiness is a choice and that we are fully responsible for our own lives. This episode questions that assumption and asks whether the good life is really a private achievement. Drawing on virtue ethics, the African philosophy of Ubuntu—“I am because we are”—and the social critiques of thinkers like G. W. F. Hegel and Adam Smith, we examine how trust, dignity, meaningful work, and recognition are social goods no individual can manufacture alone. In contrast to radical individualism associated with Ayn Rand, the argument is that personhood and flourishing are relational achievements. You are responsible for your character and conduct—but not for conditions you did not choose. If happiness depends on the health of a community, then the question is no longer just “Am I responsible for my own happiness?” but “What do we owe each other for the good life to be possible at all?”
Support the show
Question Everything!