Golden mean, in philosophy, an approach to ethics that emphasizes finding the appropriate medium, or middle ground, between extremes. The phrase golden mean is most frequently applied to the ethical ideas described by the ancient Greek philosopher Aristo
"How to live the good life" is a subject treated by Confucius and Aristotle in a manner that exhibits many surprising points of coincidence, not least in the colossal influence of both these philosophers on the social and political shape of their respective civilisations. This article is an ...
Aristotle’s Golden Mean: Its Implications for the Doping Debatedoi:10.1080/00948705.2010.9714769Jung Hyun HwangCollege of Health and Human DevelopmentR. Scott KretchmarCollege of Health and Human DevelopmentJournal of the Philosophy of Sport
Moral excellence is a rough mid-point or mean between two kinds of badness—one of excess and the other of defect . . . . Some of the extremes constantly face journalists and need to be reconciled with the golden mean . . . . For Aristotle, such cases would not be either/or ...
This suggests, for example, that if you don’t want people to say mean things to you, then you shouldn’t say mean things to them. Empathic/responsive form. The empathic formulation of the golden rule states that when you wish something upon others, you also wish it upon yourself. This...
Samuel, D. B., and Tay, L. (2018). Aristotle's golden mean and the importance of bipolarity for personality models: a commentary on "Personality traits and maladaptivity: unipolarity versus bipolarity". J. Pers. doi: 10.1111/jopy.12383...
Virtue ethics, Approach to ethics that takes the notion of virtue (often conceived as excellence) as fundamental. Virtue ethics is primarily concerned with traits of character that are essential to human flourishing, not with the enumeration of duties. I
所属专辑:Story of Philosophy-Aristotle 音频列表 1 34. It is obvious that this doctrine 50 2019-08 2 33. The golden mean, however 51 2019-08 3 32. The chief condition of happiness 34 2019-08 4 31. VII. Ethics and the Nature of Happiness ...
(Aristotle, 384 BCE) Cherish reciprocal benevolence, which will make you as anxious for another’s welfare as your own. (Aristippus of Cyrene, 365 BCE) Act toward others as you desire them to act toward you. (Isocrates, 338 BCE) This is the sum of duty: Do naught unto others which ...
儒家与亚里士多德中庸伦理思想比较AComparativeStudyofTwoDoctrinesGoldenMeanbetween 系统标签: 中庸儒家伦理亚里士多德doctrines思想 2004年9月海南大学学报人文社会科学版Sep.2004第22卷第3期Humanities&SociaISciencesJournaIofHainanUniversityVoI.22No.3儒家与亚里士多德“中庸”伦理思想比较强琛,钱昌照(湖北大学哲学系,湖...