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URL:https://www.learndesk.us/class/5079489400799232/lesson/a6b11970fd5e5f49c38265c7a14380f2?ref=outlook-calendar
SUMMARY:Activity 3: Philosophical Texts 
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260501T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260501T200000
LOCATION:https://www.learndesk.us/class/5079489400799232/lesson/a6b11970fd5e5f49c38265c7a14380f2?ref=outlook-calendar
DESCRIPTION: The Good Enough Life by Avram Alpert The desire for greatness also unites the diverse philosophical camps of Western ethics. Aristotle called for practicing the highest virtue. Kant believed in an ethical rule so stringent not even he thought it was achievable by mortals. Bentham&rsquo;s utilitarianism is about maximizing happiness. Marx sought the great world for all. Modern-day libertarians will stop at nothing to increase personal freedom and profit. These differences surely matter, but while the definition of greatness changes, greatness itself is sought by each in his own way. Swimming against the tide of greatness is a counter-history of ethics embodied by schools of thought as diverse as Buddhism, Romanticism and psychoanalysis. It is by borrowing from D.W. Winnicott, an important figure in the development of psychoanalysis, that we get perhaps the best name for this other ethics: &ldquo;the good-enough life.&rdquo; In his book &ldquo;Playing and Reality,&rdquo; Winnicott...

https://www.learndesk.us/class/5079489400799232/lesson/a6b11970fd5e5f49c38265c7a14380f2?ref=outlook-calendar
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SEQUENCE:3
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