Background
Asselin, Don Thomas was born on March 8, 1954 in Grosse Pointe, Michigan, United States. Son of Dean Regis and Donna Jean (Steenrod) Asselin.
(In his «Nicomachean Ethics», Aristotle says that eudaimon...)
In his «Nicomachean Ethics», Aristotle says that eudaimonia («happiness») is the end of human nature. In the Greek thinker's moral theory and theory of human nature, that good has a definite content, and is a universal and even obligatory moral good -- the «true good» of man. Dr. Asselin argues that the connection that Aristotle sees between human nature and eudaimonia illuminates both human nature and the supreme moral good. To the same extent, Aristotle is a perennial source for theorizing about human nature, human moral qualities, and the best life for man.
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Asselin, Don Thomas was born on March 8, 1954 in Grosse Pointe, Michigan, United States. Son of Dean Regis and Donna Jean (Steenrod) Asselin.
Bachelor, Grand Valley State College, Allendale, Michigan, 1976. Master of Arts, University Chicago, 1978. Doctor of Philosophy, Marquette University, Milwaukee, 1987.
Budget analsyt, City of Chicago, Department Budget, 1981; teaching fellow, Marquette U., Milwaukee, 1981-1984; Adjunct Professor, Loyola University, Chicago, 1985-1988; assistant professor, Hillsdale (Michigan) College, since 1988. Consultant Family Superior vena cava syndrome of Jackson County, Jackson, Michigan, 1989, Right to Life of Michigan, Lansing, 1990-1992, Michigan Department Education, Lansing, 1992.
(In his «Nicomachean Ethics», Aristotle says that eudaimon...)
Expert witness Michigan Senate Human Resources Committee per Right to Life of Michigan, Lansing, 1990. Director education Right to Life of Hillsdale, Michigan, 1991-1992. Fellow Michigan Council Humanities, Lansing, 1992.
Member American Philosophical Association, International Society Neoplatonic Studies, American Maritain Association, American Catholic Philosophical Association.
Married Kate Bradley Tuttle, June 2, 1979.