Epicurus preface & Intro I-IV
1. How is the public image of Epicurus that has come down to us "gravely flawed"?
2. What question expresses the metaphysical problem of The One and the Many? Do you think the senses are more a veil from or a bridge to the real world?
3. Do you agree with Heraclitus or Parmenides? Is it wise or appropriate to "philosophize in poetry"?
4. Do you think empty space truly exists?
5. Should we credit the early Atomists with "speculative depth" or were they just lucky?
6. Is popular religion still a source of superstition and fear?
7. Are you comforted by Atomic immortality?
8. Is death "nothing to us," or was Epicurus trying to whistle past the graveyard?
9. What makes Epicurus a "sensible humanist"?
10. Is the doctrine of The Swerve really a "complete failure"? Do you think Epicurus thought it a proof of free will, a reason to resist determinism, an anticipation of modern physical theories of quantum indeterminacy, or... ?
11. Is human happiness inseparable from the life of the senses?
12. Is hell a psychological projection?
13. Was Berkeley crazy?
14. Are feelings a better guide to the good life than reason? Or are both equally important?
— Dream of Reason: A History of Western Philosophy from the Greeks to the Renaissance by Anthony Gottlieb
Graceful-life philosophies
I mentioned in my posted introduction to students that I consider myself a kind of epicurean, and invited them to tell us on Opening Day (for extra credit) what that means. This might help.
"Where the Hellenistic philosophies excelled was the production of what could be called secular religions. They were based on self-help–oriented doctrines often borrowed from the earlier philosophers but interpreted and presented in a way that made more direct sense to a lot of people. I'm calling them graceful-life philosophies to distinguish them from other philosophy. Their goals were practical happiness, and they were not merely theoretical about it: they provided community, mediations, and events. In this they were more like religions, but they did not identify themselves as religions and they had remarkably little use for God or gods.
The Hellenistic graceful-life philosophies had a lot in common. The experience of doubt in a heterogeneous, cosmopolitan world is a bit like being lost in a forest, unendingly beckoned by a thousand possible routes. At every juncture, with every step, one is confronted with alternative paths, so that the second-guessing becomes more infuriating even than the fact of being lost. After a direction is chosen, one is constantly met with another tree in one's path. What do you do if you come from a culture that had a powerful sense of home and local value, and now you are lost in something vast and sprawling, meaningless and strange? The stronger your belief in that half-remembered home, the more likely you are to panic, to grow claustrophobic among the trees and beneath their skyless canopy. Hellenistic men and women felt a desperate desire to get out of the seemingly endless, friendless woods.
The graceful-life philosophies of this period were able to achieve an amazing rescue mission for the human being lost in the woods and bone-tired of searching for home. They did this by noticing that we could stop being lost if we were to just stop trying to get out of the forest. Instead, we could pick some blueberries, sit beneath a tree, and start describing how the sun-dappled forest floor shimmers in the breeze. The initial horror of being lost utterly disappears when you come to believe fully that there is no town out there, beyond the forest, to which you are headed. If there is no release, no going home, then this must be home, this shimmering instant replete with blueberries. Hang a sign that says HOME on a tree and you're done; just try to have a good time. Thus the cosmopolitan doubter looks back on earlier generations with bemused sympathy—they were mistaken—and looks upon believing contemporaries with real pity, as creatures scurrying through the forest, idiotically searching for a way out of the human condition. After all, it isn't so bad if you just settle in and accept a few difficult ideas from the get-go."
— Doubt: A History: The Great Doubters and Their Legacy of Innovation from Socrates and Jesus to Thomas Jefferson and Emily Dickinson by Jennifer Hecht
And see The Swerve: How the World Became Modern by Stephen Greenblatt...
Nice epicurean message here...
The day is short The night is long Why do we work so hard To get what we don’t even want? We work so hard to get ahead of the game Work half our lives until we’ve won. And then one day we sit on the edge of our bed And we think, “Lord, what have I done?” The day is short The night is long Why do we work so hard To get what you don’t even want? The man in the suit comes home and kisses his babies goodbye. “Daddy’s got to go on a trip, honey, oh no, don’t you cry.” He’s gone for a week then he’s home for a day. Well, pretty soon the babies won’t cry when Daddy’s gone away. The day is short The night is long Why do you work so hard To get what you don’t even want? You know we go to the mall and we go from store to store. Everybody seems to be wasting time until death walks through the door. And then you look at all your merchandise and you see We paid too high a price, you’ll see The day is short The night is long Why do we work so hard To get what you don’t even want
Are feelings a better guide to the good life than reason? Or are both equally important?
ReplyDeleteI would definitely say that both are equally important. One thing that I think is important to consider though is that I believe that reason is incomplete without emotion. One of the factors that contributes to reason is the human element. When reasoning, we are not devoid of emotion, nor do we lack consideration for emotion. Emotion is one of the factors that we cannot separate from humanity, and therefore, we cannot separate them from reason.
I completely agree Flynn! You often see people in discourse try and establish the two has entirely separate, and in some cases as incompatible, but as you said it is not possible to reason entirely free of emotion.
DeleteI really like your connection between emotion and reason. I feel like too many people try to separate the two. There's this idea that a rational, logical being should then be less emotional. Instead, I feel that a logical being that uses reason would understand that emotion needs to be implemented.
DeleteEmotional intelligence is real, and definitely reflects the integration of reason and feeling as complementary dimensions of a well-rounded personality. I would distinguish positive and negative emotions, though, and give reason priority in thinking through the sources and implications of negativity rather than just surrendering to it in the name of holistic well-roundedness. If a person is congenitally sad, for instance, I'd hope they would reflect on whether that sadness is rooted in a realistic view of one's circumstances, possibilities, aspirations etc. Sometimes it is possible to reason one's way out of a funk or a self-limiting habit (etc.), and into a more positive stance towards life and the future. But contrarily, sometimes the reasoning intellect should take a back seat and follow emotion's lead in the pursuit of happiness. No methodical and objective analysis of the discretionary time I devote to baseball, for instance, should be allowed to discourage me from pursuing the happiness it brings me... says the feeling side of my nature.
DeleteGreat post Flynn! I agree with you, I think that reason and emotion are very much tied together. However, I think in certain areas human necessity calls for a higher attention to reason than emotion. Take the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, whether you agree with Truman's decision or not, I feel Truman very much had to conquer his human emotions to make, what he felt, was a reasonable decision. There was definitely emotion involved, but to make such a decision you have to put your emotions on the backburner.
Delete8. Is death "nothing to us," or was Epicurus trying to whistle past the graveyard?
ReplyDeleteIt seems Epicurus would agree with Mark Twain, when he said that he had been dead before he were born for billions of years, and had not suffered the slightest inconvenience because of it. I am as of yet convinced of what death has in store, and whether it is nothing to us or not. I think there is both comfort, and discomfort to be potentially found in the ideas of Epicurus towards death. While it is comforting that death may bring about no suffering, it is not comforting to think that our lives were all borne out from birth date to death date, having no ultimate or transcendent purpose. Not that we should have any reason to expect, or deserve such a purpose, but it certainly would be a great comfort for such a comfort to exist. Or perhaps we should take the mentality that since this life is in fact all we get, we should live it to its absolute best (and figuring out what life absolute best means is its own problem).
I actually prefer the condition of not being granted a purpose but rather being free to identify and pursue the purposes I fashion for myself. What's that cartoon in which a little robot is demoralized to learn that his programmed purpose is to pass the salt? That's how I'd feel, if I learned that my only reason for being was to fulfill my programmer's intentions.
Delete10. Is the doctrine of The Swerve really a "complete failure"? Do you think Epicurus thought it a proof of free will, a reason to resist determinism, an anticipation of modern physical theories of quantum indeterminacy, or... ?
ReplyDeleteI believe so. Epicurus attempts to solve determinism seemingly with, random determinism? The idea that our ethical decisions are based on the random swerving of atoms does not appear to me to avoid being deterministic in any capacity. In fact, in some ways I think I find the idea of the atomic swerve an even less preferable state of reality then determinism. Under determinism the cause of our actions would at least be understandable, under the principle of the atomic swerve the cause for action would seemingly be random and there is something terribly unsettling about that.
What, though, if we could learn to initiate and control "swerves"? What if the very process of reflective deliberation and decision was in fact a swerve from otherwise-determined and in-principle predictable events? What, in other words, if we defined free will as a swerve initiated by agents who've chosen to interrogate their own inertial tendendcies ands launch new causal sequences in the world? Is it possible that Epicurus was getting at something like that, as a challenge to us all not to be passive, compliant, and unquestioning?
DeleteIs popular religion still a source of superstition and fear?
ReplyDeleteI have to sadly say yes to this. It seems that religion still guides the minds of many which in itself is not a bad thing. I believe religion can do a lot for somebody, and can make them a better person if utilized in a proper way. However, it seems that religion is still used as an excuse to fester fear in people against others.
Some religion, though, right? Not all? In particular those that promise eternal torment for the unrepentant? And for Unitarians. And Democrats.
Delete11. Is human happiness inseparable from the life of the senses?
ReplyDeleteI believe that human happiness is based off of your life experiences and your ultimate perspective of life. Experiences and perspectives may be achieved through the use of the senses, or perhaps lack thereof. It would be too narrow minded to assume that someone lacking some of their senses in some capacity cannot experience happiness. There are people who are rendered sightless, or are deaf but that does not exclude them from experiencing happiness in other aspects of their life.
Did you see Johnny Depp in Transcendence? His "uploading" stripped him of his senses. He didn't seem happy.
Delete6. Is popular religion still a source of superstition and fear?
ReplyDeleteYes, I do believe that some religions in this world are still a source of superstition and fear. I am only really versed in Christian religion, so I am not able to speak too much to others such as Islam and Judaism, to name a few. However, I think there are many people who would say they fear certain religious groups, like the Westboro Baptist for example. Personally, I just cannot wrap my head around a group who acts and does the things the Westboro Baptist do. As we have spoken of on previous post, obtaining happiness is not a justification to hurt or harm other people. Similarly, Religion is not a justification to hurt, harm, or even tell people how they should live. I think a lot of fear and superstition stems from the pushing of religious ideologies on others.
What makes Epicurus a "sensible humanist"?
ReplyDeleteEpicurus has branched away from the ideas of Aristotle, Plato, and Stoics, focusing on what is materialistically present without the notion of a superior being watching over you. Through focusing on the physical, the attention is directed to our connections with one another on this planet. Fostering these social connections with others will produce more empathy and community.
The afterlife and God is completely absolved in the Epicurus world which bestows authority upon how individuals choose to live. There is no predetermined outcome for your life and it gives the individual independence to pursue what makes them happy.
4. Do you think empty space truly exists?
ReplyDeleteI do not. After taking an astronomy course here at MTSU, we learned about the Neutrino which is the most abundant subatomic particle. In fact, we learned that there are neutrino detectors to observe these particles.
These detectors are set up near the South Pole where icy conditions must be present for the Neutrino to produce "electrically charged secondary particles" that result in "Cherenkov light" (blue light). The reason for this is because neutrinos pass through the ice faster than light.
https://icecube.wisc.edu/science/icecube/