TGL021: ARISTOTLE ON HOW TO LIVE THE GOOD LIFE

W/ EDITH HALL

06 July 2020

On today’s show, I talk with Edith Hall, the author of Aristotle’s Way: How Ancient Wisdom Can Change Your Life, and she is a Professor at King’s College in London.

We talk about Aristotle, one of the earliest and greatest thinkers to take up the subject of the Good Life. He has had a major impact, especially in the West, on happiness and how we can live a flourishing life, but his writing can also be dry and tough going for the average reader.

SUBSCRIBE

IN THIS EPISODE, YOU’LL LEARN:

  • Why it’s better to think of Happiness as something we do, not something we are
  • Why doing the right thing ethically is so important to happiness
  • How we all have a unique potential based on our talents
  • Why achieving our potential – the best version of ourselves – is so important
  • How to make better decisions
  • How to handle bad luck
  • The role that habits play in achieving the Good Life

HELP US OUT!

Help us reach new listeners by leaving us a rating and review! It takes less than 30 seconds and really helps our show grow, which allows us to bring on even better guests for you all! Thank you – we really appreciate it!

BOOKS AND RESOURCES

CONNECT WITH SEAN

CONNECT WITH EDITH

TRANSCRIPT

Disclaimer: The transcript that follows has been generated using artificial intelligence. We strive to be as accurate as possible, but minor errors and slightly off timestamps may be present due to platform differences.

Sean Murray  00:03

Hello, everyone! Welcome to The Good Life. I’m your host, Sean Murray.

My guest today is Edith Hall. She’s a professor at King’s College in London, and the author of Aristotle’s Way: How Ancient Wisdom Can Change Your Life. In this episode, you’ll learn it’s better to think of happiness as something we do, not something we are; why doing the right thing ethically is so important to happiness; how we all have a unique potential based on our talents; why achieving that potential –the best version of ourselves– is so important; how to make better decisions; how to handle bad luck; and the role that habit plays in achieving the good life. There’s so much wisdom packed into this one. I hope you enjoy my conversation with Edith as much as I did. My friends, I bring you Edith Hall.

Intro  00:55

You’re listening to The Good Life by The Investor’s Podcast Network, where we explore the ideas, principles, and values that help you live a meaningful, purposeful life. Join your host, Sean Murray on a journey for a life well-lived.

Sean Murray  01:18

Welcome to The Good Life!

Edith Hall  01:20

I’m very pleased to be with you.

Sean Murray  01:23

Nice to have you here.

Your book, Aristotle’s Way, presents Aristotle’s time-honored ethics, what we might call his guide to the good life in a modern contemporary language, which I thoroughly enjoyed. You bring Aristotle into the modern world for the reader and making his ideas more accessible. His lessons cover a lot of ground. He can help us make better decisions, improve our character, resist temptation, find a balance in life, treat people better, and build stronger friendships and relationships. He was a prolific writer and I hope we get into all these subjects, but I wanted to start with who Aristotle was, especially for listeners who may not be as familiar.

Edith Hall  02:05

Aristotle was born in quite a small, very beautiful northern independent Greek town called Stagira in the 4th century BCE. He was the local medical doctor’s son, so they weren’t particularly rich, but they were perfectly comfortable as a middle-class family. He sadly lost both his parents when he was about 13 and was adopted by his brother-in-law. He had an older sister who’d married a very kindly gentleman, who embraced him, took him in, and realized that he was extraordinarily intelligent. Aristotle was most fortunate to go to a household in which somebody just spotted him.

His brother-in-law, Proximus, sent him off to the best university in the world, and probably then the only really big university, which is Plato’s Academy. From ages 17 to 37, this young man, just reveled in being in the company of the best brain in Greece, owning his young man’s philosophy on Plato, whom he adored, but radically disagreed with. When Plato died, in the way of envious colleagues, even though Aristotle should have been made head of the academy immediately, he wasn’t. They passed him over in favor of somebody much more tedious.

PROMOTIONS

Check out our latest offer for all The Investor’s Podcast Network listeners!

TGL Promotions

We Study Markets