Saturday, November 23, 2019

Goodness thoughts of Aristotle, Martin Buber & Emmanuel Kant essays

Goodness thoughts of Aristotle, Martin Buber & Emmanuel Kant essays The Topic of goodness has been written on by thousands of different writers and philosophers. Three of them are Aristotle, Immanuel Kant and Martin Buber. Each of them wrote different essays on their thoughts of goodness. Some people think pleasure is good; others think that pleasure is bad. Aristotle was a man who sought pleasure and believed that pleasure is desirable. Can any person truthfully say that they do not desire pleasure in some form or appearance? No, every person desires, if not strives for, some sort of pleasure in their live. Even though Aristotle sought pleasure, he knew there are pleasures of different kinds so he avoided the bad pleasures, those that are immoral in their origin. Instead, Aristotle sought the good pleasures, those that were noble in their origin. Aristotle then asked if everyone desires pleasure then why do people not feel pleasure continuously. Aristotle answers this in a simple yet complete way; he says that human beings grow weary of pleasure and that the pleasure is derived from activities, so when the activity stops so does the pleasure. Both kinds of pleasure, those that are noble and those that are immoral, perfect the activities they accompany. If you take p leasure in an activity then you will do that activity better and better until it is perfected. But pleasure is neither the ultimate answer, nor the ultimate goal for Aristotle. The goal and end for Aristotle is happiness or the perfect state. Because pleasure perfects activities and activities make up life, through pleasure a person can reach the perfect state and happiness. Aristotle makes a point of stating that happiness is made up of virtuous activity, hence only good pleasures can lead to true happiness. The best and most virtuous activity according to Aristotle is a persons reason. Reason must be encompassed into as many of our activities as possible as it is the most virtuous an...

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