I notice that more students these days seem to aspire to wealth and celebrity as prerequisite to a good life they'll love. We'll address that tomorrow in CoPhi with Aristotle. Today's stoic meditation addresses it too. And so did the Beatles.
""Let's pass over to the really rich—how often the occasions they look just like the poor! When they travel abroad they must restrict their baggage, and when haste is necessary, they dismiss their entourage. And those who are in the army, how few of their possessions they get to keep . . ."—SENECA, ON CONSOLATION TO HELVIA, 12. 1. b–2
Hemingway rightly pricked Fitzgerald's infatuation with the rich by writing, "Yes, they have more money." They do not have demonstrably more virtue, integrity, or happiness. They do tend, these days, to have more indictments and legal fees, and a great deal more to answer for in their conduct.
It's true, money can't buy you love and it can't buy eudaimonia. It won't make you rich in spirit, it won't create the web of mutually sustaining relationships that studies (like that decades-long Harvard project) show to be the real source of human satisfaction with life.
— The Daily Stoic: 366 Meditations on Wisdom, Perseverance, and the Art of Living by Ryan Holiday, Stephen Hanselman
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Successor site to the Philosophy of Happiness blog (http://philoshap.blogspot.com/) that supported PHIL 3160 at MTSU, 2011-2019. The course returns Fall 2025.
PHIL 3160 – Philosophy of Happiness
What is it, how can we best pursue it, why should we? Supporting the study of these and related questions at Middle Tennessee State University and beyond. "Examining the concept of human happiness and its application in everyday living as discussed since antiquity by philosophers, psychologists, writers, spiritual leaders, and contributors to pop culture."
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