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Aristotle’s entelechy and eudaimonia in sports
Author(s) -
Stavroula Roumpou
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
psychological thought
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.199
H-Index - 4
ISSN - 2193-7281
DOI - 10.5964/psyct.v11i2.252
Subject(s) - teleology , eudaimonia , aesthetics , the good life , psychology , ideology , epistemology , practical wisdom , environmental ethics , social psychology , philosophy , politics , law , political science
Athletics, a microcosm of real life, is and constantly has been a polymorphous phenomenon, encompassing contemporary ideas of life, mind, spirit and emotion. Among Aristotle's several contributions to modern thought, one of the most intriguing, was the idea of what eudaimonia, the highest good is and the means for its fulfillment. Whilst shifting the guiding concerns from the rather moral athletic affairs on the means towards self-fulfillment, the impetus of the current article was to delve, under the teleological Aristotelian lens, on modern philosophical concerns related to successful accomplishment that expands beyond athletic effectiveness, envisioning an alternate path of approaching not only athletic psychosynthesis, but in addition, mental states that are experienced spiritually, delivering the Athlete’s ideological as well as ethical finishing touch.

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