Don thank you for your tips and advice regarding this, and you gave some helpful links for further research.
This word is connected to αταραξία (ataraxia)
When investigating the word ταράττεσθαι (tarattesthai), I wanted to get as far away as possible from the word ataraxia. Ataraxia says nothing about what is to be removed or avoided.
Apologies, but found this to be of interest... (and after this I will refrain from further posting using AI translation).
QuoteDisplay MoreQuery: how many times is the word αταραξία found in the text of the Letter to Menoeceus ?
Google AI response:
The word αταραξία (specifically in its accusative form, ἀταραξίαν) appears exactly one time in the original Greek text of Epicurus's Letter to Menoeceus. [1]
Where It Appears
The single occurrence is found in Section 128 of the text: [1, 2]
QuoteWhy Is It Only Used Once?
It is a common misconception that the word repeats constantly implying that ataraxia is the central pillar of Epicurean philosophy. However, Epicurus preferred to describe the concept of tranquility using descriptions of what is absent rather than repeating the abstract noun itself: [1, 2, 3, 4]
- Verbal Descriptions: He frequently writes about "not suffering pain" or "not being alarmed". For instance, immediately following his single use of ataraxia, he uses the phrase "ὅπως μήτε ἀλγῶμεν μήτε ταρβῶμεν" ("so that we may neither suffer pain nor feel fear"). [1]
- Alternative Terms: He often relies on words like ἀπορία (lack of physical pain) or shifts to general discussions of ἡδονή (pleasure), defining it purely as the baseline state when all bodily and mental distress is cleared away. [1, 2, 3]