What is a good life? A question that has no correct answer. Depending on who you ask, when you ask, or how you ask, the answer may vary between things such as financial stability, a thriving social life and a healthy lifestyle. The answer that I may give you about what, in my opinion, a good life is would most likely differ from the answer from one of my fellow classmates, or even myself had you asked me a few years ago, due to varying cultural backgrounds, experiences and moral values. The idea of a good life has evolved immensely over the past centuries and millennia. Living conditions have been adjusted, modified and remodeled to suit the circumstances of life. Thus, the ideal that we as humans have come up with, ”a good life”, has undeniably transformed alongside the development and advances on our planet. During the Middle Ages, your life might be considered a “good” one if you’ve managed to evade the Black Death for decades, despite residing in the center of a horribly infected village. Even further back, during the stone age, a good life was probably one where you could find enough food to feed yourself every day and not have to worry about being eaten alive by ravenous beasts while deep in slumber. If someone were to tell you that these were the qualities that they found to be necessities in a good life today, you would probably look at them as though they were completely and utterly daft, as a consequence of the rapidly changing, ever-fluctuating values of society. As I mentioned earlier, another significant factor that may cause your view on a good life to vary from another individual’s might be your age. If you asked a child what their definition of a good life is they might reply with something along the lines of, “No bed-times and unlimited computer time”, whereas a struggling adult may answer, “Being able to financially ensure that you have the resources to support yourself currently and in the future