Sts Chapter 2
Sts Chapter 2
Sts Chapter 2
SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY
AND SOCIETY AND THE
HUMAN CONDITION
LESSON 1:
THE HUMAN FLOURISHING IN TERMS OF
SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
PREPARED BY:
CRISTY LYN P. FLORES
INSTRUCTOR
Lesson 1: The Human Flourishing in Terms of
Science and Technology
What is Happiness?
In psychology, happiness is a mental or emotional state of well-being which can
be defined by, among others, positive or pleasant emotions ranging from
Dearcontentment
Sir/Madam,to intense joy.
To behaviorists, happiness is a cocktail of emotions we experience when we do
something good or positive.
To neurologists, happiness is the experience of a flood of hormones released in the
brain as a reward for behavior that prolongs survival.
The hedonistic view of well-being is that happiness is the polar opposite of
suffering, the presence of happiness indicates the absence of pain. Because of this,
hedonists believe that the purpose of life is to maximize happiness, which
minimizes misery.
Eudaimonia, a term that combines the Greek words for "good" and "spirit" to
describe the ideology. Eudaimonia defines happiness as the pursuit of becoming a
better person. Eudaimonists do this by challenging themselves intellectually or by
engaging in activities that make them spiritually richer people.
Aristotle
--> Aristotle believed that human flourishing requires a life with other people. Aristotle
taught that people acquire virtues through practice and that a set of concrete virtues
could lead a person toward his natural excellence and happiness.
--> According to Aristotle, there is an end of all of the actions that we perform which
we desire for itself. This is what is known as eudaimonia, flourishing, or happiness,
which is desired for its own sake with all other things being desired on its account.
Eudaimonia is a property of one's life when considered as a whole. Flourishing is the
highest good of human endeavors and that toward which all actions aim. It is success
as a human being. The best life is one of excellent human activity.
Eudaimonia
“good spirited”
Coined by Aristotle
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Describes the pinnacle of happiness that is attainable by humans.
Manager
“human flourishing”
From Nicomachean Ethics (philosophical inquiry into the nature of
the good life for a human being.)
Lesson 1: The Human Flourishing in Terms of Science and Technology
DIFFERENT CONCEPTIONS
OF HUMAN FLOURISHING
Eastern
• Focus
Dear is community-centric
Sir/Madam,
• Individual should sacrifice himself for the sake of society
• Chinese Confucian system
• Japanese Bushido
• Encourage studies of literature, sciences, and art for a greater cause
Western
More focused on the individual
Human flourishing as an end
Aristotelian view
Aims for eudaimonia as the ultimate good
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Manager
Lesson 2: Technology as a Way of Revealing
WHAT ARE THE STEPS OF SCIENTIFIC METHOD?
Science as Method
Science is an organized way of studying things and finding answers to
questions. Scientific method is an approach to seeking knowledge that
involves
Dear forming and testing hypothesis. This methodology is used to answer
Sir/Madam,
questions in a wide variety of disciplines.
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Lesson 2: Technology as a Way of Revealing
Dear Sir/Madam,
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Lesson 2: Technology as a Way of Revealing
Dear Sir/Madam,
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Lesson 2: Technology as a Way of Revealing
Dear Sir/Madam,
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Manager
Lesson 2: Technology as a Way of Revealing
Dear Sir/Madam,
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Manager
Lesson 2: Technology as a Way of Revealing
Dear Sir/Madam,
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Lesson 2: Technology as a Way of Revealing
Dear Sir/Madam,
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Lesson 2: Technology as a Way of Revealing
Dear Sir/Madam,
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Lesson 2: Technology as a Way of Revealing
Dear Sir/Madam,
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Lesson 3: The Good Life
What is “the good life?” This is one of the oldest philosophical questions. It has
been posted in different ways – How should one live? What does it mean to “live
well?” – But these are really just the same question. After all, everyone wants to
live well, and no-one wants “the bad life.”
Moral life
One basic way in which we use the word “good” is to express moral
approval.
This moral conception of the good life has had plenty of champions.
Socrates and Plato both gave absolute priority to being a virtuous person
over all other supposedly good things such as pleasure, wealth, or power.
In Plato’s, Georgais, Socrates takes this position to an extreme. He argues
that it is much better to suffer wrong than to do it; that a good man who has
his eyes gouged out and is tortured to death is more fortunate than a
corrupt person who has uses wealth and power dishonourably.
In his masterpiece, the Republic, Plato develops this argument in greater
detail. The morally good person, he claims enjoys a sort of inner harmony,
whereas the wicked person, no matter how rich and powerful he may be or
how many pleasure he enjoys, is disharmonious, fundamentally at odds with
himself and the world.
Many religion also conceive of the good life in moral terms as a life lived
according to God’s laws. A person who lives this way, obeying the
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commandments and performing the proper rituals, is pious. And in most
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religions such piety will be rewarded.
Christian martyrs went singing to their deaths confident that they would
soon be in heaven. Hindus expect that the law of karma will ensure that their
good deeds and intentions will be rewarded, while evil actions and desires
will be punished, either in this life or in future lives.
Lesson 3: The Good Life
The Life of Pleasure
The ancient Greek philosopher Epicurus was one of the first to
declare, bluntly, that what makes life worth living is that we can
experience pleasure.
The view that pleasure is the good, or to put it another way, that
pleasure is what makes life worth living, is known hedonism.
It suggests that they are devoted to what some have called the
Dear“lower” pleasures such as sex, food, drink and sensual indulgence in
Sir/Madam,
general.
Epicurus was thought by some of his contemporaries to be
advocating and practicing this sort of lifestyle, and even today an
“epicure” is someone who is especially appreciative of food and
drink.
Epicurus certainly praised all kinds of pleasures. But he didn’t
advocate that we lose ourselves in sensual debauchery for various
reasons.
Doing so will probably reduce our pleasures in the long run
since over-indulgence tends to cause health problems and limit
the range of pleasure we enjoy.
The so-called “higher” pleasure such as friendship and study
are at least as important as “pleasure of the flesh.”
The good life has to be virtuous. Although Epicurus disagreed
with Plato about the value of pleasure, he fully agreed with him
on this point.
Today, this hedonistic concept of the good life is arguably
dominant in Western culture. Even in everyday speech, if we say
someone is “living the good life,” we probably mean that they
enjoying lots of recreational pleasure: good food, good wine,
skiing, scuba diving, lounging by the pool in the sun with a
cocktail and a beautiful partner.
What is key to this hedonistic conception of the good life is that
it emphasizes subjective experiences. On this view, to describe a
person as “happy” means that they “feel good,” and a happy life
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is one that contains many “feel goo” experiences.
Lesson 3: The Good Life
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Lesson 3: The Good Life
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Lesson 3: The Good Life
MATERIALISM
The first materialists were the atomists in Ancient Greece. The atomist
philosophers thought that universe and matter are only made up of
atoms “atomos” or seeds. These are indivisible particles, assembled by
chance and in a purely mechanical way. The founders of this theory
was the Greek philosopher Leucippus and his disciple Democritus
Dear Sir/Madam,
(around 460-370 B.C.). This belief aims that comfort, pleasure, and
wealth are the only highest goals.
HEDONISM
Epicurus continued the theory of materialism, which does not buy any
notion of afterlife. The hedonists see the end goal of life in attaining
pleasure. For hedonists, since life is limited, one must indulge itself with
pleasures – “Eat, drink and be merry for tomorrow we die”. They strive
to maximize their total pleasure, the difference of pleasure and pain,
and if the pleasure was finally gained, happiness remains fixed.
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(Epicurus)
Lesson 3: The Good Life
STOICISM
Stoicism is one of the schools of thought in
philosophy created for those who live their lives in
the real world. It was founded in Athens by Zeno
of Citium (early 3rd century BC). Stoicism asserts
that virtue (e.g. wisdom) is happiness and
judgment should be based acts on behaviour
Dear
ratherSir/Madam,
than words. People do not have any control
and must not rely on external events, only foe
themselves and their responses. This philosophy,
helps a person to overcome destructive emotions
and acts on what can be acted upon. Stoicism
also differs from other schools of thought with its
purpose as a practical application rather than Marcus Aurelius
intellectual enterprise.
THEISM
The ultimate basis of happiness for theists is the communion with God. They
believe that they can find the meaning of their lives by using God as the creator
of their existence. Theism is a belief that one or more gods exist within the
universe, and that gods are often omniscient (all-knowing), omnipotent (all-
powerful), and omnipresent (all-pervasive). This belief incorporates
Monotheism (believe in one God) and Polytheism (belief in many gods). The
Abrahamic faiths such as Judaism, Christianity, Islam, as well as Hinduism are
all theistic religions.
HUMANISM
Humanism is another school of thought that
affirms that human beings have the right and
responsibility to give meaning and shape
their own lives. “It is not theistic and does not
accept supernatural views of reality” – IHEU,
International Humanist and Ethical Union.
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