Introduction: Happiness and Economics If Aristotle was right that the good for humans—our best kind of life—consists in the pursuit and realization of happiness (a virtuous, a flourishing life), we are left to determine what that means. Each person somehow arrives at their version of an answer and lives it day-by-day, but if the living falls away from a first commitment to happiness and, equally important, to the discernment of what best composes happiness for him or her, then to that extent their life has failed. To forget why you live or to misperceive the reason and meaning that your life could have are what make failure. Since we live...

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