Epicurus and Epictetus.ppt
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1、Epicurus and Epictetus,Clark Wolf Director of Bioethics Iowa State Universityjwcwolfiastate.edu,Epicurus:,Epicurianism: In all things, we should pursue pleasure: the life that has in it the most pleasure is the best life for human beings. Opening of Letter to Menoeceus: Let No One Delay. Compare to
2、Plato & Aristotle.,Contrast Class: The Cyrenaics,Aristippus- 435-350 BCE Reported to have held that owe should pursue as many pleasures, preferably as intense as possible, as we can possibly obtain. Even when intense pleasures lead to subsequent pain, they should still be sought, for a life without
3、pleasure or pain would be boring. Cyrenaicism The Stoics, including Epictetus, spread scandalous rumours about Epicurus: “This is the life of which you pronounce yourself so worthy: eating, drinking, copulating, evacuating, and snoring!“ (Epictetus, Discourses) (Did Aristippus really hold the views
4、attributed to him?) Epicurus recommended an ascetic life of calm and enduring pleasures. Suspicious of intense pleasures in general, since they lead to later pains.,Epicurus: Three Kinds of Desires,1) Natural-Necessary: Natural desires that must be satisfied for one to have a pleasant life (ex: food
5、 and shelter). 2) Natural-Unnecessary: Desires that, though natural, need not necessarily be satisfied for a pleastant life (desire for a big house, elegant food (fish, meat, cheese) and perhaps even sexual desires). XXX- even these we should try to expunge with reason. 3) Unnatural: Desires that ar
6、e neither natural nor necessary to satisfy (desire for wealth, power, fame).XXVI.,Epicurus Instruction Manual for a Pleasant Life:,1) For a pleasant life, we should neglect the third class and focus on the first, though we may also satisfy our desires of the second kind, when doing so will not lead
7、to discomfort or pain. 2) It is NEVER prudent to try to satisfy unnecessary and unnatural desires, because in the long run this will lead to disappointment, dissatisfaction, discomfort, and poor health. Still, “No pleasure is a bad thing in itself“ VIII but only for the bad effects it may have.,Epic
8、urus Instruction Manual for a Pleasant Life:,Epicurians on Sex: Sex they found especially problematical. Epicurus writes: “ Sexual intercourse has never done anyone any good, and one is lucky if one has not been harmed by it.” Lucretius, a later Epicurian, argued that sex was OK as long as it was no
9、t done with passion. (!?),Epicurus Instruction Manual for a Pleasant Life:,3) “TAKE THE LONG VIEW“ and PLAN CAREFULLY Epicurus focuses on the pleasant LIFE, so any pleasure or desire we are considering must be understood in the context of our whole lives. The duration of pleasures, he claimed, is mo
10、re important than their intensity. So mental pleasures are superior to physical pleasures. XVI Wise person will not allow her life to be ruled by chance.,Honor and Justice?,PLEASURE AND HONOR IN EPICURUS: Honor and justice are independent goods, he seems to imply V but only those who lead a pleasant
11、 life can achieve it. What is the nature of honor and justice? Are they good in themselves? Well, only pleasure is good.Epicurus believes that they are INSTRUMENTALLY good, because dishonour and injustice are unpleasant, and lead to problems later. Like some current defenders of naive utilitarianism
12、, Epicurus seems to have been undisturbed by this, since he seems to have thought that Honor and Pleasure never really come in conflict with one another. He doesnt explicitly consider what one would do in such cases, but his position forces him to conclude that pleasure should come first if conflict
13、 ever did arise.,Alternate Conceptions of Pleasure:,Positive v. Negative Conceptions of Pleasure: Epicurus conception of pleasure is “negative,“ since he defines pleasure as the lack of pain and frustration. This could be contrasted with the Cyrenaic conception of pleasure as a good thing to be achi
14、eved, rather than successful avoidance of what is bad.,EPICTETUS AND STOICISM:,Three Stoics:Seneca (3 BC-65 AD), Roman Senator Epictetus, (50-60 to 100-130 AD) Slave Marcus Aurelius, (121-180 AD) Emperor virtue = good will = will that things happen as they are going to.,On what is “up to us”,#1: Onl
15、y care about what is up to you.#2: Allow yourself to want or to be averse only to those things that are entirely within your control.#28: Dont turn yourself over to “bad masters” like passion and wrath.,INSTRUCTIONS FOR STOIC VICTORY:,#3: Dont become attached to what is fragile, things whose fate is
16、 not up to you. (In all contexts? What of attachments to friends and family?) #15: “Dont stretch out your desires toward what is not in your control. #16 Dont let other peoples troubles disturb you. (“Do not groan inwardly.“) #19 The final stoic victory: “You can be invincible if you do not enter an
17、y contest in which victory is not up to you.“ Nota Bene: Guard against the wrong interpretation of this: Epictetus is not literally recommending that we should never enter races we cant win, but that we make sure that the only races we enter with full devotion and conviction are internal and control
18、able.,Epictetus, Discourses, From “Of the Right Treatment of Tyrants“,“When the tyrant says to anyone, “I will chain your leg,“ he who chiefly values his leg cries out for pity; he who chiefly values his own moral purpose says “If you imagine it for your interest, chain it.“ “What! Do you not care?“
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