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Discover LudwigThe phrase 'makes pleasure' is not correct in written English.
It does not make sense in its current form. If you are looking for a phrase that conveys a feeling of pleasure, you could say "makes for a pleasurable experience" or "brings pleasure". For example: "The beautiful music brings pleasure to my ears".
Exact(6)
It makes pleasure a principle.
Unbound makes pleasure fashionable.
Consider a substantive hedonist who believed that what makes pleasure good for us is that it fulfills our nature.
In this view, what makes pleasure good is something about our attitudes albeit not about our actual attitudes (which may be unfitting).
And like Scotus, he makes pleasure a natural but not an exceptionless result of loving acceptance, it seems for a combination of empirical, theological, and Aristotelian reasons.
A complete hedonist position will involve also explanatory hedonism, which consists in an answer to the following question: 'What makes pleasure good, and pain bad?', that answer being, 'The pleasantness of pleasure, and the painfulness of pain'.
Similar(54)
It will redefine the field to make pleasure appear to be at one with virtue.
Nature's vicissitudes make pleasure brief; Existence is short for each brilliant leaf.
"This proposal is just guiding us round and round, making pleasure jaunts, rather than moving toward the peak.
It's long been understood that making pleasure your goal in life will lead to diminishing returns.
The danger — particularly for a society as rich as ours — is making pleasure the central focus in the pursuit of a happy life.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com