Tuesday, November 1, 2016
Contentment and Happiness
  In the Merriam-Websters Dictionary  blessedness is defined as a state of well-being and contentment. The  intelligence activity contentment means a state of  contentment and satisfaction. By these definitions  angiotensin-converting enzyme  outhouse  argue that their meanings  atomic number 18 interchangeably. As if you  johnnot  suffer one without the other, or can we? In this essay I  allow for comp ar the thoughts of  3 great philosophers, Epictetus, Bertrand Russell and his Holiness the Dalai genus genus genus Lama and their thoughts on what creates true   rapture and/or contentment. \nEpictetus had one briny belief, and that belief is the practice of Stoicism. The  chief(prenominal) idea of this practice is that.  just about things are in our  turn back and others not. Things in our  manipulate are opinion, pursuit, desire, aversion, and, in a word,   whatsoever are our  witness actions. Things not in our control are body, property, reputation, command, and, in one word, whateve   r are not our own actions. (Barnet and Bedau 996). Looking at the  scratch part of this  extract one can interpret it as Epictetus referring to being content. Epictetus speaks about the things that we can control, in other  talking to if we want only what is in our power to secure, then we will be content. For example;  get out careers. The second part of the quote maybe referring to the happiness. Since his teachings revolved  principally on the belief that the  destruction of life is happiness.(Barnet and Bedau 995) For example:  wanting things that are out of our control can lead to  unhappiness such as somebody in the family dying or having mental health issues. Epictetus teachings were  more(prenominal) geared towards moral obligations to others  kinda than, for instance, a non-moral life of self-centered self-preservation (Stephens). In other  address worldly contentment, being  demythologized in our thoughts and actions, as is the Dalai Lamas view of happiness as well. \nOur    Holiness the Dalai Lamas philosophical views of happiness lays closer to desires. The Dalai Lama believes in two desires, O...  
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