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Happiness

Is happiness (eudaemonia) possible?
Accepted:
October 14, 2005

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Jyl Gentzler
October 14, 2005 (changed October 14, 2005) Permalink

The answer to this question will depend on your conception ofhappiness. Not only do different philosophers differ in their viewabout what constitutes happiness (go here),they also have different views about how much of anything thatcontributes to happiness is required before one counts as happy. Thinkabout it this way. On different philosophical conceptions, differentthings count as good or bad for us. To the extent that we have the goodthings, we are better off. To the extent that we lack the good thingsand possess the bad things, we are less well-off. On a scale from very,very badly off to very, very well-off, there is a point at which onecounts as happy or eudaimon– namely, when one has enough ofwhat is good (and lacks enough of what is bad) to count as living a good life (that is, good foroneself), or as flourishing. Depending on how high on the scale oneplaces happiness and depending on the difficulty of achieving theconstituents of happiness, it will be more or less easy to becomehappy. If one sets the bar extremely high or if the constituents ofhappiness are extremely rare and difficult to attain, then it may wellbe impossible for humans ever to be happy; they can merelyapproach happiness.

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