Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byClarissa Evans Modified over 9 years ago
1
H APPINESS Chapter 12
2
H APPINESS OVERVIEW The search for happiness is high on the list of themes in the humanities We say “oh well, as long as they’re happy” What defines happiness? Is joy equal to happiness? Can we be happy without joy?
3
H EDONISM Happiness is the sum total pleasures experienced during one’s lifetime. Hedonism-happiness is equivalent to physical pleasure and to the possession of things that provide us with pleasure Home and society might try to teach us less selfish values, but instinct prevails
4
L ITERARY HEDONISM Shakespeare-Eat, Drink and be Merry Robert Herrick-Gather Ye Rosebuds “Carpe Diem”- seize the day
5
H EDONISM A SSUMPTIONS Everyone deserves as much pleasure as possible Pleasure is automatically good No amount of pleasure is ever too much The absence of pleasure is a misfortune for which compensation is due Big earnings theory- an “earning” is considered the pleasure owed to a deserving person for services rendered or unpleasant chores completed
6
E PICUREANISM Happiness is avoiding pain Assumptions Pleasure is good, but not the only good (sometimes we may pass over many pleasures when greater discomfort accrues to us as a result of them). Temperance No one can sustain pleasure over prolonged periods of time Avoid excess, seek out controllable, nonphysical pleasures (humanities)- treasures one “ cannot lose”
7
C RITICISMS Definition of pleasure is too limited Hedonists claim human nature but there are those who choose to live otherwise, are they “freaks”? Just as rooted in self- interest as Hedonism just different mask Should be detached in order to avoid pain, isolated HedonismEpicureanism
8
S TOICISM Don’t plan ahead for a life of unlimited pleasure nor should you expect to avoid pain through discipline and moderation. Pain is intrinsic to living Best possible action is to prepare for the worst and develop a technique for dealing with it. Nothing is under our control expect the way we think about things. Romans embraced this concept/lifestyle, no excess, bare necessities
9
S TOICISM AND C HRISTIANITY Blended perfectly, the idea that only the soul, not the body mattered Christian martyrdom deeply rooted in stoic principles Prosperity does not last forever, seeks not pleasure but inner peace.
10
C RITICISM OF STOICISM If pain is temporary, then so is happiness Critics say stoics secretly want everyone else to be miserable too Schadenfreude- German term for the pleasures derived from the misfortune of others
11
A RISTOTLE ’ S VIEWS -” W HAT AM I DOING THAT MAKES MY LIFE GOOD ?” Not moment to moment, but a characterization of how one’s life is being conducted If we are living a good life along the way, we know we are on the right path What gives us pleasure or joy at one moment cannot be happiness because we can always think of something that would be better If we allow reason to be our guide we will always do the right thing. That way we can guarantee we are living the good life May have regrets, but doesn’t mean that life was not a happy one HappinessReason and Virtue
12
A RISTOTLE Role of government is to see that citizens are happy Offer protection How can government reasonably protect the state if it sometimes uses unreasonable methods? Assumes that a society with citizens’ welfare as the sole concern of government would be on its way to happiness. Societies are much more complex, bureaucracy Can’t rely on government to make you happy Government’s RoleReconsidered…
13
M ODELS OF H APPY LIVES History is filled with remarkable examples of how good lives managed to overcome horrible barriers. Anne Frank Martin Luther King Jr. Gandhi
14
B UDDHIST P ATHS Develop teachings of Siddhartha into 4 noble truths… Life is filled with pain The cause of pain is frustrated desire There is a way out of pain The way out is the Eightfold Path Adds a larger perspective and a more expansive concept of bliss Nirvana is attainable in one lifetime Move beyond 4 Truths to help others Hinayana (little ferryboat) Mahayana (big ferryboat)
15
D ALAI L AMA Leader of Tibetan Buddhism Practices Mahayana Tranquility is achieved through acceptance of everyone else, not burning desire to change them.
16
I N CLOSING, Once you recognize that you are in control of defining your happiness and can make it mean what is possible for you, not what you can never hope to achieve, then you may experience a measure of contentment.
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.