Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Jean Kazez Southern Methodist University

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Jean Kazez Southern Methodist University"— Presentation transcript:

1 Jean Kazez Southern Methodist University
Necessities Jean Kazez Southern Methodist University

2 I want to live a good life I want to live a meaningful life same thing?

3 Very roughly... ...adds up to something ...has value
A good life... ...has value A meaningful life... ...adds up to something What more can we say?

4 Taylor on the meaning of life
What is the good life?

5 The Myth of Sisyphus The gods punished Sisyphus for stealing their secrets by forcing him to push a giant boulder up a hill forever. Over and over again it rolled back down, and he was forced to start all over again.

6 This is objectively meaningless...
Taylor says... This is objectively meaningless...

7 Why objectively meaningless
Why objectively meaningless? Taylor’s definition: a meaningful activity/life has some significant and lasting result.

8 The Myth of Sisyphus (Taylor’s revision)
... and then the gods took pity on Sisyphus, and injected a drug into his veins so that he would enjoy his endless labors.

9 I want to keep pushing!

10 Taylor If we ardently desire the lives that we have,
then the lives that we have are subjectively meaningful

11 TAYLOR’S ASSESSMENT OBJECTIVELY MEANINGLESS BUT
I want to keep pushing! OBJECTIVELY MEANINGLESS BUT SUBJECTIVELY MEANINGFUL NEED EXTRA CLICK

12

13

14

15 My life is objectively meaningless?
What, me worry?

16 Taylor says-- Do you agree with 1, 2, 3, and 4?
Objectively meaningful = significant and lasting result Our lives are not objectively meaningful But they ARE subjectively meaningful And that’s good enough Do you agree with 1, 2, 3, and 4?

17 The Meaningful life The Good Life EXTRA CLICK

18 IS THIS A GOOD LIFE? I want to keep pushing!

19

20

21 THE DESIRE VIEW OF THE GOOD LIFE
A good life contains lots of good Good = desire fulfillment (3) Sisyphus has lots of fulfilled desire (C) Sisyphus has a good life

22 Tempting, but...

23 Desire fulfillment isn’t always good

24 Desires implanted by the gods
Desires implanted by advertising Desires manipulated by bad people Desires that are adaptive— “I want it because it’s easier if I just adapt”

25 revise

26 Or move on?

27 The Tree of (the Good) Life
Simple Happiness View Objective List View Desire View Aristotle Cultural Relativism Inflexible One-size-fits-all Extreme Relativism Flexible Relativism Absolutism

28 Objective list view* ingredient etc. ....
Items are on the list NOT because we desire them, and NOT because they make us happy, BUT because they are intrinsically good. Shafer-Landau calls it “The Objective View”

29 Recipe for a good life A-LIST necessities MUST HAVE ALL
if one is missing, life is flawed B-LIST OPTIONAL INTErchangEable if one missing, life need not be flawed

30 Discovering the necessities
books movies examples draw on other theories thought experiments avoid ethnocentrism

31 What must we change to make his life a good one?
I want to keep pushing!

32 Autonomy I’M GOING TO BECOME A...

33 What is autonomy? Being author of your own life
Controlling where you live, what work you do, how you do the work, what hours you work

34 What’s “enough”? arranged marriage (of adults, of children)
Did Galileo’s daughter have enough? Could a slave have enough?

35 Self MY OPINION IS... I LIKE...

36 Nowhere man-- “Doesn’t have a point of view, knows not where he’s going to” —The Beatles

37

38 Morality THOU SHALT NOT...

39 Why is it necessary? Why does adding morality to the life of Sisyphus make it a better life? Morality as cure for profound isolation Morality as cure for finitude

40 Happiness AWESOME!!!

41 Happiness can come from
Helping orphans Listening to music Eating a lot of ice cream Torturing kittens Magic Drug DOES IT MATTER?

42 Maggie and Magic Drug

43 Happiness comes from good
I’M FREE... AWESOME!

44 American Cancer Society
Constance Beethoven Land’s End fashions American Cancer Society Reads the bible Same from 21 to 81

45 Progress I NEED A CHANGE...

46 The List Autonomy Self Morality Happiness Happiness from good sources
Progress Other?

47 The new life of Sisyphus

48 The Tree of the Good Life
Hedonism Objective List View Desire View Aristotle Cultural Relativism Inflexible One-size-fits-all Extreme Relativism Flexible Relativism Absolutism

49 Decisions, decisions... 1. same value choices
2. different value choices 3. morality/other value choices Chapters 7-8

50 Necessities not on list?

51 All you need is love?

52 A. Love relationships  an optional ingredient
☐ one of the necessities  an optional ingredient  instrumentally important for securing happiness and other goods

53 “Find what you love” the trumpet chemistry medicine Jane Austen etc.
B. Loving X “Find what you love” the trumpet chemistry medicine Jane Austen etc.

54 Harry Frankfurt, The Reasons of Love
Love is foundation of value No love-independent “objective” list

55 How to have a good life find what/whom you love
loving it makes it seem to have intrinsic value add that loved thing to your live presto: a good life!

56 This sounds familiar...

57 Is the love view any more plausible than the desire view?

58 I love it! IS THIS A GOOD LIFE?

59 Loving X is... ☐ The reason why those things matter
 Instrumentally important for securing happiness, morality, self, etc. ☐ The reason why those things matter

60 What’s play got to do with it?

61 What’s God got to do with it?

62 For the low, low price of $25.95!!!
See chapters 1, 6, and 9 For the low, low price of $25.95!!!


Download ppt "Jean Kazez Southern Methodist University"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google