| 1. | Fleeting pleasure, then, takes a back seat to protracted eudaimonia.
|
| 2. | Eudaimonia requires not only good character but rational activity.
|
| 3. | Moral virtue is both necessary and sufficient for eudaimonia.
|
| 4. | To encourage eudaimonia verbally is not sufficient enough to suffice eudaimonia into adulthood.
|
| 5. | To encourage eudaimonia verbally is not sufficient enough to suffice eudaimonia into adulthood.
|
| 6. | It is significant that synonyms for eudaimonia are living well and doing well.
|
| 7. | Plato s ethical theory is eudaimonistic because it maintains that eudaimonia depends on virtue.
|
| 8. | Aristotle s ethical theory is eudaimonist because it maintains that eudaimonia depends on virtue.
|
| 9. | The related trait of eudaimonia or psychological well-being, is also heritable.
|
| 10. | Thus, the sage's happiness, eudaimonia, was based entirely on virtue.
|