Philosophy of (more) Happiness
Successor site to the Philosophy of Happiness blog (http://philoshap.blogspot.com/) that supported PHIL 3160 at MTSU, 2011-2019. The course returns Fall 2025.
PHIL 3160 – Philosophy of Happiness
Up@dawn 2.0
Sunday, March 22, 2026
Wednesday, March 11, 2026
NYTimes: Tell Us About How You Pursue Happiness
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Saturday, March 7, 2026
a marvelously rich panorama
Where, in the last resort, does my treasure lie?--in everything. A man should have many irons in the fire; he should not let his happiness be bound up entirely with his children, or his fame, or his prosperity, or even his health; but he should be able to find nourishment for his content in any one of these, even if all the rest are taken away.
My last resort, I think, would be Nature herself; shorn of all other gifts and goods, I should find, I hope, sufficient courage for existence in any mood of field and sky, or, shorn of sight, in some concourse of sweet sounds, or some poet's memory of a day that smiled. All in all, experience is a marvelously rich panorama, from which any sense should be able to draw sustenance for living."
— On the Meaning of Life by Will Durant
https://a.co/01SShLe1
Friday, March 6, 2026
Already “justified”
https://www.threads.com/@evavila99/post/DVhhu7rk50d?xmt=AQF0A4_OgjNNMFNpRtxQYxsljFjCS6mshEoqDifzDBHNH63B3uz_if9ZeqDQUXsp8h1WIjw&slof=1
Thursday, March 5, 2026
Wednesday, March 4, 2026
Fun and the importance of play
— The 7 Secrets of Happiness: A Reluctant Optimist's Journey by Gyles Brandreth
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B074PHJSTW?ref_=quick_view_ref_tag
Monday, March 2, 2026
Pollan's happy place
Michael Pollan's new book on consciousness, A World Appears, was released Tuesday. He announced it on Substack.* I was pleased to be able to express there my appreciation and gratitude:
Enjoyed the opening chapter on my commute from Nashville to Murfreesboro this morning. Excellent! And may I offer a much-belated thanks, Michael, for your having taken the time back in '99 [or maybe a bit earlier] to respond with constructive comments to the unsolicited draft chapter of my Vanderbilt dissertation on William James and consciousness. It was such a generous act on your part, and came for me at the most opportune moment. And now I'm president of the William James Society (wjsociety.org) - thanks in no small part to your kind encouragement.That's not idle flattery. Michael's positive reinforcement was a shot in the arm at a time when I needed one. We corresponded after the publication of his second book, A Place of My Own, and discovered our mutual interest in the permeable boundaries of nature and culture (and of John Dewey's exploration thereof). I'm still envious of Michael's "place":
Sunday, February 22, 2026
“You must not give up on being happy”
…Her story, perhaps, offers victims a different path for survival. Her message, she says, is not that they can forget everything, but "you can choose what to do with it all." The title of her book, in French, is "The Joy of Life."
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https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/21/gisele-pelicot-interview-hymn-to-life.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share
Wednesday, February 11, 2026
Conditions
~ Ralph Waldo Emerson
Thursday, February 5, 2026
The Epicureans knew this too
"We've all experienced it: that Sunday evening moment when you emerge from an hour of phone scrolling with nothing to show for it but a vague hollow feeling. Not quite anxiety, not quite sadness—just the sense that something essential is missing. This feeling, paradoxically, defines our era of unprecedented abundance.
We live with more information, entertainment, and choices than any generation in history. Yet loneliness, anxiety, and existential confusion continue to rise. The question pressing on so many minds isn't "How do I get more?" but rather "What's it all for?" The convergence of ancient Buddhist wisdom and contemporary psychological research offers surprising—and surprisingly similar—answers
What Eight Decades of Research Reveals
Since 1938, Harvard researchers have tracked 724 individuals through their entire adult lives, conducting thousands of interviews and hundreds of medical assessments. Now continuing with their descendants, the Harvard Study of Adult Development represents the longest scientific investigation of happiness ever conducted. After 85 years, the conclusion is remarkably straightforward: good relationships keep us happier and healthier. Not wealth, not fame, not achievement—the quality of our connections with others predicts both physical and mental wellbeing as we age.
This finding would have resonated deeply with the Buddha, who identified tanha—the endless craving and reaching toward the next thing—as the root of human suffering 2,500 years ago. Without research grants or brain scans, he recognized our fundamental confusion about where happiness actually resides…"
Why it pays to be bored
Arthur Brooks https://youtu.be/ljVfXU45WGM?si=OeKVbU2Q0y5Ck6cD
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Let's introduce ourselves, fellow Happiness scholars/pursuers. I'm Dr. Oliver, I've been teaching this course in alternate years...
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View this post on Instagram A post shared by Phil Oliver (@osopher) MTSU philosophy lecturer to speak on ‘Freedom in E...
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ch5 1. How did the Epicureans depart from the Platonic and Aristotelian traditions? 52 2. The standards of meaning and truth are what, for ...