English, asked by TaBPlaYsYT, 6 months ago

write a
Debate
The more money
you have
The happier you are​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
2

Answer:

its a truth...................................................

Answered by tiwarishashwat125
0

Answer:

My stance on this is that Money is nowhere near to bringing forth ‘True’ Happiness

I will first want to make these clear to listeners:

• The secret of happiness lay in building a strong inner self that no trial or hardship could ruin.

• It begins with having the strength to confront and conquer one's own weaknesses. Only then does it become possible to lead a truly happy life.

• Now I can say with confidence that happiness doesn't exist in the past or in the future. It only exists within our state of life right now, here in the present, as we face the challenges of daily life.

• You yourself know best whether you are feeling joy or struggling with suffering. These things are not known to other people.

• Happiness is not a life without problems, but rather the strength to overcome the problems that come our way.

• Our vitality - the amount of energy or "life-force" we have - is in fact the single most important factor in determining whether or not we are happy so if you are weak, suffering will follow you wherever you go. You will never find happiness if you don't challenge your weaknesses and change yourself from within.

I believe that a person who is active and free from fear is truly happy.

There are two kinds of happiness - "relative" and "absolute" happiness.

Relative happiness is happiness that depends on things outside us: friends and family, surroundings, the size of our home or family income. While the happiness such things bring us is certainly real, the fact is that none of this lasts forever. Things change. People change. This kind of happiness shatters easily when external conditions alter.

Absolute happiness, on the other hand, is something we must find within. It means establishing a state of life in which we are never defeated by trials and where just being alive is a source of great joy. This persists no matter what we might be lacking, or what might happen around us. It is eternal and inexhaustible.

In trying to come by a definition of Happiness, Scholars, psychologists and socialist alike, came by two general theories as to what happiness means.

One is the hedonic theory. This suggests that happiness – or well-being – is entirely about the attainment of pleasure and the avoidance of pain. The more pleasure you have and the less pain you experience, the happier you are and the greater your well being. The hedonic view goes all the way back to the Greek philosopher, Aristippus, who in the fourth century B.C., described the ultimate goal in life as experiencing the maximum amount of pleasure.

On the other side is the Eudaimonic theory. This focuses on meaning, and defines well-being in terms of self realization, i.e. the extent to which we are fulfilling our potential in life. Aristotle believed that true happiness was to be found in the expression of virtue – i.e. in doing that which was worth doing.

I will like to end by stating what Abraham Lincoln said;

“Most folks are about as happy as they make up their minds to be.”

Explanation:

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