01464cgm a2200361 a 450000100160000000500170001600700100003300800410004303500230008403500110010703500200011804000230013804900090016109000180017009200080018809900160019624500770021226000790028930000540036844000300042250000500045250800360050251100230053851100210056152003170058260000450089965000120094465000150095670000350097171000540100674000290106099900130108999774811010231120260227104100.0vf-cbaho-850923p19841962ilu029 0vceng d a(TU)000774811UTK019 a810745 a(OCoLC)12589330 aFYMcFYMdm/cdTKN aTKNk aPA3893.E6bA7 a170 aPA3893.E6A700aAristotle's ethicsnbook 1h[videorecording] :bthe theory of happiness. a[Chicago, Ill.] :bEncyclopædia Britannica Educational Corp.c1984, 1962. a1 videocassette (29 min.) :bsd., col. ;c1/2 in. 0aClassical Greece ;vno. 3 aOriginally issued as a 16 mm. motion picture. aProducer/director, John Barnes.0 aMortimer J. Adler.0 aTony Van Bridge. aLecturer Mortimer J. Adler interprets Aristotle's theory of happiness and draws a parallel between Aristotle's definition of happiness and the meaning implied in the American Declaration of independence. Uses animated drawings done in the style of paintings on Greek vases to illustrate the pursuit of happiness.00aAristotle.tNicomachean ethichsnBook 1. 0aEthics. 0aHappiness.1 aAdler, Mortimer Jerome,d1902-2 aEncyclopaedia Britannica Educational Corporation.4 aThe theory of happiness. c246d246