About This Book
A philosophical dialogue examines whether pleasure or intellect constitutes the highest good, weighing pure pleasure, pure wisdom, and mixed lives. Participants analyze kinds of pleasure and pain, classify goods with attention to measure and limit, and challenge simple hedonism by arguing that unmeasured pleasure is incomplete. The argument advances that the best life combines pleasures with knowledge and that an ordering principle of reason or divine mind confers proportion and quality. Through methodical distinctions the work explores how calibrated mixtures of pleasure and wisdom produce a more complete human good and it considers epistemic and practical implications without resolving every tension.
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