- The eudaemon,
eudaimon, or
eudemon (‹See Tfd›Gr****: εὐδαίμων) in Gr****
mythology was a type of
daemon or
genius (deity),
which in turn was a kind of spirit...
- a
subject of disagreement. As a result,
there are many
varieties of
eudaimonism. In
terms of its etymology,
eudaimonia is an
abstract noun
derived from...
-
translation of the
earlier ****enistic Gr****: Εὐδαίμων Ἀραβία, romanized:
Eudaimon Arabia,
attributed to
Eratosthenes of Cyrene.
Felix has the
meanings of...
-
numen of Augustus, a
distinction that
blurred in time.
Anito Anthelioi Eudaimon Fravashi Fylgja Hyang Kami
Koalemos Moral imperative Shoulder angel Unclean...
-
coalesced honey called sakcharon [i.e. sugar]
found in
reeds in
India and
Eudaimon Arabia similar in
consistency to salt and
brittle enough to be
broken between...
-
Battus II of Cyrene,
sometimes called Eudaimon (the Blessed) or the
Latin equivalent Felix, (Gr****: Βάττος ὁ Εὐδαίμων;
ruled from c. 583 BC to 560 BC)...
-
Hestia (oikourós, housekeeper, οἰκῶναξ oikônax) ἠγός ēgós (Attic εὐδαίμων
eudaímon happy) (Hesychius s.v. εὐηγεσίη) (τ 114) ἠέλιος êélios (Attic hḗlios sun)...
- ISBN 978-90-04-39675-3. S2CID 182444038. Reshotko,
Naomi (2013). "Socratic
eudaimonism". In
Nicholas D.
Smith (ed.). The
Bloomsbury Companion to Socrates. John...
-
differ on how they
understand virtues and
their role in
practical life.
Eudaimonism is the
original form of
virtue theory developed in
Ancient Gr**** philosophy...
-
recognized by the
ancient Gr****
geographer Ptolemy, who
described Yemen as
Eudaimon Arabia (better
known in its
Latin translation,
Arabia Felix)
meaning "fortunate...