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Kant's Thoughts On Fulfillment

Kant defines human "happiness" in terms of a complete well-being and contentment with one's condition." He admits that, "the concept of happiness is such an indeterminate one that even though everyone wishes to attain happiness, yet he can never say definitely and consistently what it is that he really wishes and wills." Later, Kant writes, "Happiness is the satisfaction of all our desires, extensively, in respect of their manifoldness, intensively, in respect of their degree, and protensively, in respect of their duration."


Biography - Reality - Bodies - Personality - Knowledge - Freedom - Morality - Society - Religion - Immortality - Fulfillment


Other Philosophers on the topic of Fulfillment

Plato - Aristotle - Augustine - Aquinas - Descartes - Hegel - Sartre


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