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Single Idea 111

[filed under theme 23. Ethics / C. Virtue Theory / 3. Virtues / g. Contemplation ]

Full Idea

The more people contemplate, the happier they are.

Gist of Idea

The more people contemplate, the happier they are

Source

Aristotle (Nicomachean Ethics [c.334 BCE], 1178b29)

Book Ref

Aristotle: 'Ethics (Nicomachean)', ed/tr. ThomsonJ A K/TredennickH [Penguin 1976], p.334


A Reaction

On the other hand he regularly says that virtues concern actions, not thoughts. He sees slavery as essential to allow others to contemplate, but feeling guilty about that would ruin it.


The 13 ideas with the same theme [pure thought as a possible virtue]:

Anaxagoras said a person would choose to be born to contemplate the ordered heavens [Anaxagoras]
Only contemplation is sought for its own sake; practical activity always offers some gain [Aristotle]
Contemplation (with the means to achieve it) is the perfect happiness for man [Aristotle]
The intellectual life is divine in comparison with ordinary human life [Aristotle]
We should aspire to immortality, and live by what is highest in us [Aristotle]
The gods live, but action is unworthy of them, so that only leaves contemplation? [Aristotle]
Lower animals cannot be happy, because they cannot contemplate [Aristotle]
The more people contemplate, the happier they are [Aristotle]
Contemplation is a supreme pleasure and excellence [Aristotle]
The Stoics rejected entirely the high value that had been placed on contemplation [Stoic school, by Taylor,C]
Life and rationality are pointless if we can only contemplate the freedom of our own ego [Jacobi]
Contemplation is final because it is an activity which is not a process [Korsgaard]
For Aristotle, contemplation consists purely of understanding [Korsgaard]