The paper analyzes a section of Augustine of Hippo’s De Trinitate (354-430), where it is argued that a human being’s fulfilled life is not possible without immortality. Starting with the axiom of universal desire in happiness, Augustine debates the paradox concerning the plurality of opinions about the essence of a fulfilled life, and he rejects the relativistic definition of “living as one pleases”. Taking one’s cue from Cicero’s Hortensius, the Bishop of Hippo states two necessary conditions for a fulfilled life: having a good moral will and having everything you want. Therefore, protesting against philosophers, Augustine attempts to demonstrate that the latter is impossible to achieve during a life destined to end in death and is possible only in an immortal state. The paper highlights the implications of this doctrine in connection to the question of “good moral life”.
Lascia un commento