Now that the economy limits our spending, we are lucky to have "eudaemonia" to find less expensive means to bliss. From Wordnik.com. [Kay Goldstein: Happy Camping: Skipping Down the Path to Enlightenment] Reference
Did you even know there was such a word as eudaemonia?. From Wordnik.com. [Kay Goldstein: Happy Camping: Skipping Down the Path to Enlightenment] Reference
Aymee Coget, who wants to be the Suze Orman of happiness, handed out fliers for her 'Happiness Makeover,' a three-month route to 'sustainable eudaemonia.'. From Wordnik.com. [Kay Goldstein: Happy Camping: Skipping Down the Path to Enlightenment] Reference
"In this dopamine-laden city, where the pursuit of well-being is something of a high art, a motley array of scientists, philosophers, doctors, psychologists, navel-gazing Googlers and Tibetan Buddhists addressed the latest findings on the science of human happiness -- or eudaemonia, the classical Greek term for human flourishing.". From Wordnik.com. [Kay Goldstein: Happy Camping: Skipping Down the Path to Enlightenment] Reference
This “eudaemonia” is by no means one and the same with our notion of happiness, but includes the same in itself. From Wordnik.com. [Christian Ethics. Volume I.���History of Ethics.] Reference
In this dopamine-laden city, where the pursuit of well-being is something of a high art, a motley array of scientists, philosophers, doctors, psychologists, navel-gazing Googlers and Tibetan Buddhists addressed the latest findings on the science of human happiness - or eudaemonia, the classical Greek term for human flourishing. From Wordnik.com. [idealawg] Reference
(eudaemonia, loosely translated as "happiness" but better understood as flourishing). From Wordnik.com. [Rationally Speaking] Reference
Happiness is only the one, the subjective phase, namely, the happiness-feeling that is connected with this “eudaemonia,’” whereas the. From Wordnik.com. [Christian Ethics. Volume I.���History of Ethics.] Reference
Hence it is not without meaning when a special examination is entered upon as to whether the pleasure-feeling is included in the “eudaemonia” (Nic., i, c. From Wordnik.com. [Christian Ethics. Volume I.���History of Ethics.] Reference
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