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Compare and contrast the concepts of eudaimonia and happiness, and their respective roles in the ethical philosophies of Aristotle and Mill
In the Nicomachean Ethics, Aristotle attempts to determine what the best life consists in, and demonstrate that all human action aims at eudaimonia. Mill's ethical philosophy is that actions are right if they promote the general amount of happiness, wrong if they decrease it. Their respective concepts, eudaimonia and happiness are similar in many ways, for example, they both embrace the idea of quality of happiness as well as quantity. There is a fundamental difference
R. Norman, 1998. The Moral Philosophers. Oxford University Press J. Urmson, 1988. Aristotle's Ethics. Blackwell D. Bostock, 2000. Aristotle's Ethics. Oxford University Press J. Ackrill, 1980. 'Aristotle on Eudaimonia', in Rorty (ed.) Essays on Aristotle's Ethics D. Uyl and Machen, 1983. 'Recent Works on the Concept of Happiness', American Philosophical Quarterly D. Ross, 1923. Aristotle. Routledge W. Hardie, 1982. The Final Good in Aristotle's Ethics. C. Woodard, 2003. Module handbook for V71MOR: Moral Philosophy www.csudh.edu.phenom_studies/ethics/lect_3.htm
