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Subject: Philosophy  Book Title: The Morality of Happiness
The Morality of Happiness
Annas, Julia Professor of Philosophy, University of Arizona
Print publication date: 1995
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: November 2003
Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-509652-1
doi:10.1093/0195096525.001.0001
 
Abstract: The book examines the major traditions of ancient ethical theory, showing that they share a common theoretical structure. They are examples of eudaimonism, a type of ethical theory in which the basic concepts are those of happiness and virtue. The book looks at the way this type of theory is articulated in Aristotle, and then at the differing versions of it to be found in Epicurus, the Stoics, and Academic and Pyrrhonian Sceptics. We find a common structure: we all implicitly seek a final end in all our actions, but different theories offer rival accounts of what this consists in. To gain a proper understanding of the ancient debates, we have to examine the basic concepts of happiness and virtue, which in modern ethical theories are often subject to misunderstanding. The book first aims to recover the ancient understanding of these basic notions, then examines the role of nature in ancient ethical justification, the role in eudaimonism of other-concern, and finally the extent to which the ancient theories demand revision and transformation of everyday ethical thought.

Keywords: ancient ethical theory, eudaimonism, final end, happiness, modern ethical theory, nature, other-concern, virtue
Table of Contents
Introduction
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1. Making Sense of My Life as a Whole
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2. The Virtues
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3. Nature and Naturalism
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4. Aristotle: Nature and Mere Nature
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5. The Stoics: Human Nature and the Point of View of the Universe
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6. Antiochus: The Intuitive View
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7. The Epicureans: Rethinking What Is Natural
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8. The Sceptics: Accepting What Is Natural
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9. Uses of Nature
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10. The Good of Others
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11. Finding Room for Other-Concern
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12. Self-Concern and the Sources and Limits of Other-Concern
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13. Justice
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14. Self-Interest and Morality
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15. Happiness, Success and What Matters
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16. Epicurus: Virtue, Pleasure and Time
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17. The Sceptics: Untroubledness Without Belief
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18. Aristotle: An Unstable View
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19. Theophrastus and the Stoics: Forcing the Issue
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20. Aristotelian Responses
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21. Happiness and the Demands of Virtue
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22. Morality, Ancient and Modern
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Bibliography
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Index
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doi:10.1093/0195096525.001.0001
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I The Basic Ideas
II Justification and the Appeal to Nature
III The Good Life and the Good Lives of Others
IV Revising Your Priorities
V Conclusion