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Showing posts from October, 2018

Blog Post #8: Importance of Duty

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The Bhagavad Gita is an ancient text that teaches us the message of spiritual wisdom and the importance of duty from ancient India. In the story, Arjuna struggles to act in the Kurukshetra War when he discovers his friends, his family, and other people he knew on his opponents' side. He withdraws from the war, refusing to kill the people he loves and become responsible for their deaths. Conflicted between love and duty, Arjuna decides to not fight in the battle until Krishna appears. Krishna convinces Arjuna to stick with his duty and fight the enemies even if it costs the lives of his loved ones. He wants Arjuna to fulfill his duty  without getting bad karma in which Arjuna listens to his advice and chose to follow his duty. Every person has a duty to accomplish during our lifetime. It is a moral commitment to something or someone to make people happy. A duty involves having a moral commitment to something, for example going to jury duty or volunteering in a homeless shelt

Blog Post #7: Aristotle, the Champion of the Good Life

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“Happiness is the meaning and the purpose of life, the whole aim and end of human existence.”  ―  Aristotle Aristotle is one of the Greek philosophers that caught my attention the most. He is known for his ethical writings called the Nicomachean Ethics, an account that discusses his take on happiness. He argues that happiness is the most complete end to live a good life for the soul to exercise activities according to reason. The purpose of human life for Aristotle is to live well, flourish, and to have a good life. His model of the good life speaks to me since he asks what is the ultimate purpose of human existence. I ask myself and wonder if there is a meaning to a good life. After reading the assigned articles, I realized that to live a good life is to enjoy life and be happy. Aristotle teaches us about the goal humans must reach in order to search for happiness which is to reach Eudemonia, a state of flourishing. As humans, we grow to become a better person to achieve our

Blog Post #6: Achilles Behavior in the Iliad

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Achilles, a demi-god and the son of Thetis and Peleus, was a Greek hero who is known for his involvement in the Trojan War in Homer's The Iliad. The question I ask myself after reading this story is Achilles a hero for his actions? Is he considered a hero after what he had done to Hector after the death of his friend Patroclus? I believe that while he is considered a hero for his bravery in the war against the Trojans, he can also be nefarious for his actions. Although he has a few positive traits in which he is fearless and brave, Achilles has a few flaws. For instance, he is quick-tempered at the beginning of the story when he argues with Agamemnon for taking Briseis, his prize as well as his wife, away from him after giving up Chrysesis to her priest father after he seeks Apollo's help in returning his daughter. Achilles is also shown to be cruel when he killed Hector as an act of revenge for murdering his friend Patroclus and ties his body with a rope attached to the back