Finding Happiness in a Complex World: Rules from Aristotle and Aquinas - Charles P. Nemeth Audiobook
Language: EnglishKeywords: 
Happiness
 Philosophy
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Why, since happiness is so universally sought after, are so many people so miserable? The answer can be found by unpacking the wisdom of two of history’s intellectual giants who set out to answer the question that has confounded man from time What makes us happy? Aristotle and Thomas Aquinas existed sixteen centuries apart, yet each reached similar understandings about what makes a person happy and what makes him miserable. In these enlightening pages, Dr. Charles Nemeth synthesizes the judgments of history’s two greatest thinkers to present for you a life plan that inevitably leads to a happy human existence, whatever your ethnicity, religion, or citizenship. You will explore what it means to be happy and will come to understand the limitations of happiness. You’ll learn how to live in accordance with your basic nature so that your inclinations will not conflict with that which makes you flourish. And you’ll calibrate your compass so that you will be able to navigate your way into a state of life that makes you truly happy. Moreover, you’ll discover why happiness is obtained through action and not mere desire and why wealth and fame do not — and cannot — buy happiness. You’ll also learn why the body, despite providing avenues for sensory and intellectual pleasure, is incapable of providing true happiness. Strikingly, none of the suggestions in this book have ever been shown to be flawed. These timeless recommendations for a happy life never go out of favor and never change. Instead, they remain a constant, permanent, universal set of criteria on how to achieve a happy existence. You’ll also With this Rosetta stone of a book, you will find solutions to fortify your soul and bring you peace. You will be equipped with a new sense of direction, hope, and healing that will guide you closer to lasting happiness.
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This post has 6 comments with rating of 5/5
October 13th, 2023
Harmonise with your teleology, baby.
October 14th, 2023
Is one book on how to be happy not enough 😂
October 17th, 2023
Happiness is not found within the one book, but within oneself.
October 31st, 2023
Aristotle was a dunce. He posited that if two balls of different weights are dropped together the heavier one will hit the ground first. For 2000 years, let me repeat that, for two thousand goddam years not a single person thought to test it out. Because you know it was Aristotle and you don’t question the Big A. Ok so who are the real dunces?
November 6th, 2023
…yeah, the guy who actually created & developed the disciplines of logic & biology was of course a terribly slow fellow. Added to his rational elaboration of causation, as well making inroads into empiricism itself (Athens wasn’t constructed in a ἡμέρα).
But the key message here is that The Philosopher was witless, whereas a random internet Elementary school dropout “p” brain has everything figured out, and will be studied over the next two & a half millennia. Oy…
March 14th, 2026
Soggy, hollow “Caesar” uses many words to say nothing of value. Oy to you, soggy Caesar. Your croutons have been sitting far too long in your fly infested dressing, little rhetoric ridden piglosopher.
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