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Why Modern Readers Misunderstand Aristotle: Happiness, Pleasure, and the Highest Form of Life

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Introduction Imagine a student trying to decide what to study at university. She has always been fascinated by archaeology. As a child she spent hours reading about ancient civilizations, watching documentaries on archaeological discoveries, and visiting museums whenever she had the opportunity. When she studies the ancient world, she loses track of time. Yet almost everyone around her offers the same advice: Study something with better career prospects. Business, engineering, or computer science, they argue, will provide financial security and open more doors in the future. The advice is understandable. Education is expensive, jobs are uncertain, and few people can afford to ignore practical considerations. Yet the conversation almost always revolves around the same question: What will be most useful later? Much less often does anyone ask a different question: What activity is worth pursuing for its own sake? This way of thinking is so familiar that it seems almost self-eviden...

What Saussure Can Teach Us About How Languages Change

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Stability and Chang. AI image A Contemporary Puzzle: Why Do Some Attempts to Change Language Succeed While Others Fail? Language is constantly changing, yet most of us rarely notice it. New words appear almost every year. Terms such as email , selfie , podcast , and Wi-Fi entered everyday English within a remarkably short time. Other innovations have been more deliberate: proposals to replace traditional occupational titles with gender-neutral alternatives, introduce new personal pronouns, or revise spelling systems in order to simplify writing or better reflect pronunciation. At the same time, countless expressions that once seemed fashionable disappear almost as quickly as they appeared. Yesterday's slang often sounds dated only a few years later. These examples raise an intriguing question. Why do some linguistic innovations become part of a language while others remain proposals or fade into obscurity? Why does one new word become so familiar that we no longer notice it, w...