ou asked "What makes the good life good?"
You then said in your post:
"a good life will be a highly-meaningful life."
So is not your answer that it is richness of meaning which makes a good life good? ...Sounds true enough to me. — Yohan
One might say, of a human life, that a good life is one that makes its own judgement of itself wholeheartedly and insightfully. A poor life, by contrast, is always occupied with judgement of others. — unenlightened
Eudaimonia sounds impractical. Who actually has achieved it?I think I pointed this out before, eudaimonia (live well) is priority #1, everything else is secondary. — Agent Smith
Eudaimonia sounds impractical. Who actually has achieved it? — Yohan
sophia which no one to my knowledge knows what it is. — Agent Smith
The Good life = Jesus of Nazareth (only a man and yet ... a god). — Agent Smith
Not sure that sacrificing yourself to yourself to save us from yourself and from rules you made yourself - counts. Given Yahweh is jealous, vengeful and murderous, like any Mafia Don, then Jesus is part of the problem. — Tom Storm
I think many people would agree with you. — Tom Storm
He thought the idea of god/s were unnecessary and believed that religions generally led to conflict. He liked to garden and read books and preferred to stay out of arguments. — Tom Storm
But all versions are 'good' subject to a particular value system. — Tom Storm
I have problems with the idea of value systems. No doubt we have things we value, but I do not think that they form systems. — Fooloso4
I suspect that what is generally meant by a value system is simply those things they value rather than values that are systematically derived, determined, ordered, integrated and applied. — Fooloso4
Further, it may be that we cannot always say in advance what it is we value until we are confronted with a situation where we must act or decide. — Fooloso4
You are a traditionalist. — Tom Storm
I have considered simple minded notions of human flourishing as a goal for human behaviour. — Tom Storm
Do you value truth and beauty along with the good? — Tom Storm
And what people say (or think) they value is often not what they value in practice. — Tom Storm
Yes, but do not give them equal status. I prefer Plato's "trinity", the just, the beautiful, and the good. But I do not regard them as eternal Forms. I think that is a misreading of Plato. I have made the case for that elsewhere on the forum. — Fooloso4
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