
Contents
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What Is Flourishing? What Is Flourishing?
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Personal Becoming Personal Becoming
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Contingency and Variability Contingency and Variability
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Cite
Abstract
This chapter develops personalism on the question of the purpose of human life, which the author argues is human flourishing. The six basic goods mentioned in chapter 5 are here said to serve this larger purpose of human life, this telos. The happiness and flourishing can also be referred to as eudaimonia, as Aristotle called it, and is life’s final goal in itself. It is claimed that such goal can be accomplished at a personal level by developing and actualizing what people by nature are. The account presented emphasizes that personal flourishing is dependent upon a set of necessary personal and social-structural conditions that make it possible, and it is not uniform but diverse depending on the human. All in all, this chapter introduces the bright, “up-side” of personal being: humans enjoy the capacity, tendency, and often experience of developing their myriad real powers of personhood to maturity and expression in existence, toward flourishing.
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