The TAC Podcast

Why Ancient Greeks Understood Happiness and We Don't | E11 The TAC Podcast


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In this episode of The TAC Podcast, we begin our journey through one of the most influential works in Western philosophy: Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics. We start at the very beginning—Book One—where Aristotle sets an extraordinary aim: to define the "human good" and discover what it is that all human beings are truly aiming at. Is happiness just a feeling, or is it something more? We discuss Aristotle's famous definition of happiness as "rational activity in accordance with virtue" and explore why he believes that living well is a practice, not just a product. We also tackle the "political" nature of man and the sobering reality of how much of our happiness is within our control—and how much is left to chance. In this episode, we cover:

00:00 – The most controversial question: What is human happiness?

04:30 – Aristotle vs. Plato: Practical goods vs. the "Good itself."

07:30 – Why the "human" part of the "human good" matters.

09:50 – Candidates for happiness: Pleasure, Wealth, Honor, and Virtue.

15:00 – Why a good upbringing is a prerequisite for ethics.

20:30 – The Function Argument: What is the "work" of a human being?

31:10 – Happiness as self-sufficient and the social nature of man.

45:10 – The role of luck and "happenstance" in a good life.

Key Takeaway: "Happiness is not a state of mind, but a way of living. It is the fulfillment of our nature as rational beings, perfected through activity and virtue."

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The TAC PodcastBy Thomas Aquinas College