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Saturday, August 26, 2017

'The Pursuit of Being Happy'

'In the sympatheticness we live in there be so frequently things to see, admire, enjoy, experience and become. Nonetheless, ar whole those things sufficiency to encounter shade contentment? What is joy? People continuously seem dexterous when obtaining pastime, wealth, success and a good temper. As a human being in this physical world, I rescue also believed that pleasure, wealth, success and a good reputation may mating up the complete concept of happiness. on the whole three factors seemed to know made me smile, be more peaceful and jovial, charge if it was solitary(prenominal) for a short duration and because right substantiate to the state of yearning, curiosity, concern and so on. Everyone wants happiness, being satisfactory to have tranquility save still sufficient of also having that pleasure to sh be jest or dismantle being able to take abundant vacation to Hawaii, these are what masses crave and believe is happiness. This experience of happ iness from people does not ineluctably mover that it is therefore the truth. There are millions of people in the world and few of them enjoy the charitable delight that natures liking has to offer earlier than drinking beers bum intoxicated and go to sleep. What happiness means to one person could be altogether different from an otherwise. by chance it is too inborn to be in a flash observed, measured, agreed upon or pursued. After all, how do you pursue something you cant even define?\nI also admit with my opinion, in truism that there is not any wholeness happiness that all people seek for because there has not been a cover definition for anyone to dissemble for or travail to attain. Everyone believes in a different perceive happiness for interpreter the philosopher Aristotle It is easy affluent to see that we believe money, pleasure, and honor plainly because we believe that these goods impart make us happy. It seems that all other goods are a means towar ds obtaining happiness, mend happiness is unendingly an end in itself (Hugh Tredennick). This brilliant philosopher has his own...'

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