This article analyses ethics and education in Boethius' De consolatione philosophy of Boethius. We seek to comprehend the search for happiness as expounded in Book III of that work. Boethius takes up the idea that all men wish to reach the final good, which is identified as happiness. Lost in the fragmented multiplicity of external goods and passions, men should search - by the path of philosophy and without resorting to religion - the one true good: God. These considerations indicate the path of human life and the need for one to "learn to live" an ethical life, freeing oneself from the passions of the body that sicken the soul.
Ethics; Happiness; Supreme Good; Destiny; False goods