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**Fr. 32 **… [the latter] being as malicious as the former. I shall discuss folly shortly, the virtues and pleasure now. If, gentlemen, the point at issue between these people and us involved inquiry into «what is the means of happiness? | **Fr. 32 **… [the latter] being as malicious as the former. I shall discuss folly shortly, the virtues and pleasure now. If, gentlemen, the point at issue between these people and us involved inquiry into «what is the means of happiness? | ||
+ | ===== The Relationship Between Happiness and Pleasure ===== | ||
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+ | - In Episode 270, looking at Tusculum Disputations Part 1 at 34, we will come across an offhand reference to Epicurus disagreeing with Democritus. Apparently Democritus held that the soul may continue to exist for at least some period of time after death. Cicero points out that the Epicureans made clear their disagreement with Democritus on that point. | ||
+ | - Democritus apparently tended to think that the only thing " | ||
+ | - If we apply point (2) to the soul, then would we be concerned that Democritus held that the soul is not " | ||
+ | - It is apparently clear that Epicurus wanted to escape from the skepticism that Democritus' | ||
+ | - Dropping back to line 449 of Book one of Lucretius (which is presumably a condensation of Epicurus' | ||
+ | - [1:449] Everything that we can name to exist has attributes that we consider to be properties or events/ | ||
+ | - [1:464] Time is an example of an event that does not exist by itself, but from our feelings about the motion or stillness of things. For example, consider the Trojan War, which does not exist in itself, but as an event of things that occurred in the past. The people involved in that war are long dead, and the Trojan War is but an event of the people and things that were involved at the time. | ||
+ | - [1:483] Bodies are therefore not only the atoms that compose them, but thing things that are created when the atoms combine. In the world around us everything is porous, but by reasoning we will see that the atoms themselves are not porous, and from them everything we see is created. | ||
+ | - Diogenes of Oinoanda emphasis that happiness is a life of pleasure: in Fragment 32: "**Fr. 32 **… [the latter] being as malicious as the former. I shall discuss folly shortly, the virtues and pleasure now. If, gentlemen, the point at issue between these people and us involved inquiry into «what is the means of happiness? | ||
+ | - Torquatus in On Ends appears to equate a life of happiness with a life of pleasure | ||
+ | - Book 1 Line 32: [32] X. But that I may make plain to you the source of all the mistakes made by those who inveigh against pleasure and eulogize pain, I will unfold the whole system and will set before you the very language held by that great discoverer of truth and that master-builder, | ||
+ | - [54] But if the encomium passed even on the virtues themselves, over which the eloquence of all other philosophers especially runs riot, can find no vent unless it be referred to pleasure, and pleasure is the only thing which invites us to the pursuit of itself, and attracts us by reason of its own nature, then there can be no doubt that of all things good it is the supreme and ultimate good, and that __a life of happiness means nothing else but a life attended by pleasure.__ | ||
+ | - Switching contexts again, most of us agree that Epicurus was experiencing happiness, even on his last day, when we was wracked with pain of kidney disease. | ||
+ | - Going back to Lucretius, quoting this time from Bailey: [449] For all things that have a name, you will find__ either properties linked to these two things or you will see them to be their accidents__. That is a property__ which in no case can be sundered or separated without the fatal disunion of the thing, as is weight to rocks, heat to fire, moisture to water, touch to all bodies, intangibility to the void__. On the other hand, __slavery, poverty, riches, liberty, war, concord, and other things by whose coming and going the nature of things abides untouched, these we are used, as is natural, to call accidents__. Even so time exists not by itself, but from actual things comes a feeling, what was brought to a close in time past, then what is present now, and further what is going to be hereafter. And it must be avowed that no man feels time by itself apart from the motion or quiet rest of things. | ||
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+ | Based on the above, a question and a comment: | ||
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+ | - To what extent would it be appropriate to conclude that Epicurus is considering " | ||
+ | - The main reason I ask this is to consider whether Epicurus viewed " | ||
+ | - Would these points be helpful in describing the relationship between happiness and pleasure? | ||