The Good LifeCharles B. Guignon Organized around themes such as harmony with one's self and with the world, right relation to God, the use of reason, self-exploration, and living in a disordered world, the selections in this anthology explore traditional philosophical thought from Plato to de Beauvoir on the topic of human flourishing. |
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Contents
The Ideal of Harmony | 1 |
vii | 42 |
2223 | 53 |
22 | 60 |
42 | 66 |
Religious Ways of Life | 73 |
William James The Religion of HealthyMindedness | 132 |
The Use of Reason | 143 |
Blaise Pascal Pensées | 199 |
Ralph Waldo Emerson SelfReliance | 211 |
SelfRealization | 227 |
JeanPaul Sartre Being and Nothingness | 241 |
Simone de Beauvoir The Ethics of Ambiguity | 261 |
Social Involvement | 271 |
W E B Du Bois Of Our Spiritual Strivings from | 281 |
Martin Buber The Way of Man According to the | 288 |
Baruch Spinoza The Ethics | 159 |
Bertrand Russell The Conquest of Happiness | 173 |
SelfExploration | 183 |
A Feminine Approach to Ethics | 316 |
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Common terms and phrases
actions activity Alasdair MacIntyre alien appears Aristotle bad faith become believe Bhikkhus body called cared-for caring cause character Christ Christian Chrysippus conceive conception concerned consciousness consider death desire divine Epictetus ethics everything evil existence external eyes fact facticity fear feel freedom Fyodor Dostoyevsky give Glaucon happens happiness Hasidism heart Hence human ideal individual intelligible kind of knowledge Kondañña labor lack live look Lucretius Martin Buber means mind moral narrative nature never object one's oneself ourselves pain passions person philosophers Plato pleasure possible produces question reality reason relation relationship Sartre seek seems sense Simone de Beauvoir Socrates someone sort soul species-being spirit Stoic suffer Tao Te Ching Thee things Thou thought tion transcendence true truth turn understand universe virtue W. E. B. Du Bois whole words worker