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Posts by Cassius

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Sunday Weekly Zoom.  This and every upcoming Sunday at 12:30 PM EDT we will continue our new series of Zoom meetings targeted for a time when more of our participants worldwide can attend.   This week's discussion topic: "Epicurean Prolepsis". To find out how to attend CLICK HERE. To read more on the discussion topic CLICK HERE.
  • An Opening Conversation With A Committed Modern Stoic - Prelude to "Eight Stoic Challenges to Epicurean Philosophy" - Part 2

    • Cassius
    • March 11, 2017 at 4:26 PM

    Mish Taylor



    Mish Taylor Personally, I find no fault in having, adopting or acquiring a positive mental attitude, this to me is one of the main things that comes across in the philosophy of Epicurus. Most forms of 'talking therapy', self help & etc are simply old ideas dressed up in modern language.
    Unlike · Reply · 4 · March 6 at 1:45pm

    Donald Robertson



    Donald Robertson I'd say that's half-true. Modern therapy recycles many old ideas. However, it's definitely not true that no progress occurs. To pick the cliched example... It used to be believed that panic disorders were biologically determined and virtually untreatable by talking therapy. (For several reasons.) However, in the mid 1980s a huge advance was made by David Clark in the UK, which took the therapy for this condition from "zero to hero" and it is now shown to have one of the highest success rates of any form of psychological therapy.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 10:21pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Write a reply...

    Elli Pensa



    Elli Pensa Donald Robertson Your are kindly requested to not call Epicurean Philosophy as Epicurean-ISM. Epicurean philosophy has nothing to do with ideologies or obsessions like Communism-Nazism-Capitalism, Christianism, Budhism, Islamism etc,. Because Epicurean philosophy is a philosophy that is confirmed by the the science and has the suffix "Y" as we say PsychologY, PsychiatrY, NeurologY, EndocrinologY, PathologY etc, we say the SAME the Epicurean PhilosophY. Thanks in advance for your understanding. 1f642.png:)


    If someone would like to find a list with -isms he will find here in this link :https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=http%3…xmhcTGzFQPTyuAQ


    As we realize there is not at that list the Epicurean Philosophy as Epicurean-ism.

    but there is the "stoicism" and is explained as "a belief in indifference to pleasure or pain" !!



    Word List: Isms


    Definition of words for belief systems and isms


    PHRONTISTERY.INFO

    Like · Reply · March 6 at 2:41pm

    Hide 23 Replies




    Ron Warrick



    Ron Warrick This is hypersensitive, methinks.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 2:46pm

    Elli Pensa



    Elli Pensa No, this was not any hypersesitive thing Mr. Ron Warrick. It is after analysis, after examination on the words. After some written articles and works by our epicurean friends. And finally after many hours of conversations made among our epicurean friends in the greek Gardens and the Symposia.Thanks.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 2:59pm · Edited

    Shana HT



    Shana HT but where is the science, then?
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 3:03pm

    Elli Pensa



    Elli Pensa Shana HT In the usage of the Epicurean Canon is the whole science my dear.

    Do you know how to use this epistemic tool ?? Did you read something for this method ?
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 3:07pm

    Donald Robertson



    Donald Robertson Well, I don't want to offend anyone but to be honest, I don't really share your beliefs about the connotations of those words. As I understand it most authors still use the term "Epicureanism", and find that accepable, so I think eliminating it would be a bit cumbersome and seems unnecessary. But what do others think? Is this a common feeling among your group?
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 3:19pm

    Ron Warrick



    Ron Warrick Donald Robertson This is the first I have heard of the complaint, but it is something we can take up in the group later. No need to involve you just now.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 3:43pm

    Jason Baker



    Jason Baker Why not just shorten it to E-ism and Epicurus to Mr. E? 1f609.png;)


    Looking at the late date that -ism entered the English language, it likely doesn't have the same connotation when we use it as when our Greek friends use -ismos in their own language. Given our wholesale appropriation of Greek morphology, I'm happy to defer to the original understanding and use the preferred Greek form Epicurean philosophy instead of Epicureanism when discussing it here amongst friends.


    Perhaps if there ever were an incorporated Epicurean Church, using the -ism form in reference to it would be appropriate. In the meantime, does shortening it to Epicureanism save us so much time that it serves our purposes to be so imprecise? Precise language is one of the things that differentiates the ancient Epicurean school from the rest, one of the main complaints against the Garden by its detractors even, iirc.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 4:12pm · Edited

    Cassius Amicus



    Cassius Amicus I see Elli posted more on this at the link below, so I will add my comment there - https://www.facebook.com/groups/EpicureanPhilosophy/permalink/1251189141596710/‎Elli Pensa‎ to Epicurean PhilosophyMarch 6 at 4:34pm ·

    For my epicurean friends of here I translated into the English language some pages of the article entitled “Epicurean philosophy or Epicureanism”, by Dimitris A...

    See More

    Like · Reply · Remove Preview · 1 · March 6 at 4:40pm

    Hiram Crespo



    Hiram Crespo I don't feel strongly about 'isms', but I understand that some others do. It may have to do with the Platonizing influence of language in the abstract of in the singular instead of plural. It helps to more accurately describe nature.
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 7:07pm · Edited

    Elli Pensa



    Elli Pensa Platonizing yes, but also it has to do with the masses Hiram.and our philososphy has first priniciples to start from the PERSON and his uniqueness.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 6:39pm

    Elli Pensa



    Elli Pensa As we read in Liantinis’ book entitled : “STOA & ROME”, we see that the suffix –ism has its origin from the Latins !


    Here we are...


    from a remarkable excerpt of Dimitris Liantinis book "STOA AND ROME":

    [...“ The big difference at the spiritual attitude of the Greeks and the Romans”.

    This difference is indicating at the type of the linguistic fossils of the two cultures that survived in the modern world. The Global Greek words like music, philosophy, theater, geometry, mathematics, physics, astronomy, political, architecture, demos-democracy, words that they declare a youth's shininess and a weight of quality towards to the conditions that the Latin language has saved. Under the conventional shape of : “ismus” the rescue to the terms of the Latin language expresses : the team, the indiscriminate, the unexceptional. But the enviable uniqueness is missing. Eg rationalism (ratio), potentialism (potentia), Imperialism (imperium), socialism (socius), Pacifism (pax), militarism (miles), Realism (res), pessimism (malus), optimism (bonus) etc...]

    --------------------------------------

    According to the above excerpt of Dimitris Liantinis, when we say epicurean-ISM we are missing this “enviable uniqueness of the person”. And the epicurean philosophy, has for first principles the uniqueness of the PERSON and not to the impersonal of the MASSES. Thus, for our proper thinking if we use epicureanism and not epicurean philosophy in our terminology and in our reference... our view for the Epicurean Philosophy collapses...and collapses (to use one of his own Liantini's words ) συγκορμοδεντρόριζη “syngormodentrorizi”(=tree trunk with its roots). 1f642.png:) Thank you !


    «I was never anxious to please the mob. For what pleased them, I did not know, and what I dο know, was far removed from their comprehension (Epicurus). All the above was in one of my comments as stated from 23 of July 2014.
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 7:00pm

    Ron Warrick



    Ron Warrick I think it is a category error to conflate a philosophy and its adherents. The adherents may be individuals while the philosophy is uniform.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 8:46pm

    Elli Pensa



    Elli Pensa Who said that we the epicureans are adherents or followers? We are students and we study the specific, genuine, and true hellenic philosophy that was given by Epicurus and his friends who are studied the Nature. The epicureans keep their first principles, and among other pupils of other philosophies were, are and will be the only persons who keep the scientific method all of their written works to be based on sources and making reference to these sources.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 8:59pm

    Ron Warrick



    Ron Warrick Elli Pensa Fine. Change the word to "students" and I still stand by my point.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 9:03pm

    Elli Pensa



    Elli Pensa I do not understand your point on the issue of our epicurean first principles. As we say our first principles start from the person, Epicurus addressed to the person and not TO the masses. He had not a willing to be a leader. He was a philosopher and every individual studies his philosophy which is based on the observation of Nature.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 9:09pm

    Jason Baker



    Jason Baker This reminds me so much of the arguments about collective vs. individual rights in Con Law.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 9:30pm

    Ron Warrick



    Ron Warrick Elli Pensa I don't think an "-ism" implies anything about whether the ideas are for the individual or for the masses.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 10:01pm

    Donald Robertson



    Donald Robertson It seems to me that in modern English -ism is just a generic suffix that's commonly used to denote a cluster of ideas related to the root word. And it's commonly used precisely to avoid any specific connotations about the sort of thing being referred ...See More
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 10:26pm

    Elli Pensa



    Elli Pensa Donald Robertson I explained further with an article that I already posted what means ISMS and where they lead...TO THE IDEOLOGIES. As it is well known the Epicurean philosophy is not an ideology and is not addressed to the masses but in the person. As...See More
    Unlike · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 10:56pm

    Elli Pensa



    Elli Pensa And here is another book by an outstanding scientist who wrote for Epicurus these words : .Image may contain: text

    Unlike · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 10:59pm · Edited

    Donald Robertson



    Donald Robertson Elli Pensa Sure but I disagree with your claim about what the suffix ISM means. As I understand it, the English suffix doesn't necessarily refer to an "ideology" but is broader in scope than you're suggesting.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 11:20pm

    Donald Robertson



    Donald Robertson Elli Pensa Sure but that doesn't make Epicurean philosophy itself a "science" does it? It would be more accurate to say Epicureans have a philosophy or set of doctrines that has some historical links with science or can potentially be supported with f...See More
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 11:22pm

    Elli Pensa



    Elli Pensa Donald Robertson Right. The epicurean philosophy is not a science itself. But where I did say that ? I copy paste here of what I commented to you exactly :"You are kindly requested to not call Epicurean Philosophy as Epicurean-ISM. Epicurean philosoph...See More
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 7 at 5:50am

    Cassius Amicus

    Write a reply...

    Matt Jackson



    Matt Jackson I do have a question for Donald, I'm not well read in Stoicism. But I have a pretty strong background in Neoplatonic philosophy. I was wondering how Stoic thought might relate to Neoplatonic concepts of virtue? Is there a commonality or a big difference?


    https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=http%3…dCwLoXlz0RN6rIo
    The Enneads of Plotinus: THE FIRST ENNEAD: SECOND TRACTATE: Section 1
    The Enneads of Plotinus, at sacred-texts.com
    SACRED-TEXTS.COM

    Unlike · Reply · Remove Preview · 3 · March 6 at 2:53pm

    Donald Robertson



    Donald Robertson Ok. As I understand it the admins are happy for me to answer these questions here. I'm no expert on Plotinus but it seems to me that his Platonic concept of virtue is more abstract than what the Stoics have in mind. Stoic virtue is knowledge, which consists in applying preconceptions correctly to specific situations in life. I think Plotinus probably means something more like a mystical participation in the Divine. There's bound to be overlap and similarity depending on who you ask and how they interpret the two philosophies, though. On the face of it, Stoic Ethics appears less mystical, but then on closer inspection it does have a sort of mystical quality as well. Virtue is a sort of harmony between the individual and the universe as a whole, or the cosmic Logos, at least from one perspective.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 10:34pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Write a reply...

    Matt Jackson



    Matt Jackson Virtue, like Beauty and other positive qualities are emanations of the One, they bring about a Likeness to the Divine Principle. Is there any commonality of thought in Stoicism? To Plotinus and others like Proclus, the One is the source of the Good in this world. Is there anything in Stoicism that mirrors that? Is there a "God" principle in Stoicism?
    Unlike · Reply · 3 · March 6 at 4:11pm · Edited

    Donald Robertson



    Donald Robertson Yes, this isn't as much the focus of Stoic Ethics as it is in Plotinus but the Stoics believed in Zeus, whom they equate with the Logos, and virtue is an imitation of the Mind of Zeus by mortals, and also consists in piety and harmony with the cosmos taken as a whole, which as pantheists (or panentheists) they basically equate with Zeus. (That's not usually the aspect of Stoicism that's at the fore in writers like Seneca or in modern approaches to it, though.)
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 10:37pm

    Matt Jackson



    Matt Jackson Awesome, thank you for the reply. It sounds in some way very similar in some respects to Plotinian thought, though there is some different terminology. What would you equate the Cosmic logos to? Like the Tao? Or the Dharma? Not really a sentient Cosmic Nous?
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 10:41pm

    Matt Jackson



    Matt Jackson The Neoplatonists had the idea that the Nous was a creative element in the Universe, it was an active mind. Is the Logos something similar? Or impersonal like the Tao?
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 10:43pm

    Matt Jackson



    Matt Jackson Getting these answers will really help me "grasp" Stoic thought. So i thank you.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 10:44pm

    Donald Robertson



    Donald Robertson Matt Jackson The Stoic Logos is equated with the Mind of Zeus, who is a rational animal that encompasses the whole universe. I don't think I'd describe it as "personal", though, it's a bit more of a philosophers' god than that, although it's probably more pantheistic than Plotinus' philosophy. It's ultimately drawn to a large extent from Heraclitus.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 11:14pm

    Matt Jackson



    Matt Jackson Yes it seems like Zeus or the Logos is a whole that is fragmented into "us." Like a organism with individual parts. So in that way it seems that virtues are derived from human reason not a divine hypostasis.
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 11:32pm

    Matt Jackson



    Matt Jackson Plotinus was far more panentheistic in the sense that the 3 main hypostasis are separate, though immanent in all things. Therefore, the Cosmic Nous is separate from Man, yet man takes part in it.
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 11:34pm

    Matt Jackson



    Matt Jackson Virtue trickles down from the perfection of the One, into the contemplating and creative mind of the Nous down to the Animate Soul. Would it be fair to say in Stoic thought that the "reasoning" aspect is not in a divine Mind but rather in each individual taking part in the greater whole?
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 11:43pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Write a reply...

    Mish Taylor



    Mish Taylor Donald Robertson What improvements to my life can Stoicism bring that the philosophy of Epicurus can't?
    Unlike · Reply · 3 · March 6 at 3:23pm

    Shana HT



    Shana HT to cope with difficulty.. maybe its just a personality thing... but thinking of good and pleasure when im in trouble does nothing for me


    what stoic philosophy does for me, is it makes me mindful of what my hardship is and how i can overcome and surpass it. i feel like practicing it makes me stronger, richer, happier and more confident


    but i have to say, when life isnt so burdensome, some aspects of Epicurian philosophy brings much joy


    i just dont understand this animosity towards stoic philosophy and feel alone in trying to find a way to utilize both philosophies
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 5:19pm

    Jason Baker



    Jason Baker You're not alone, Seneca led the way for you. He couldn't reconcile them either. 1f609.png;)
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 5:31pm

    Mish Taylor



    Mish Taylor Shana HT I find it more helpful not to focus on the negative. Things that are beyond your control or influence, will be what they will be. Anything else can usually be overcome with a bit of humour, creative thinking and a bit of support if needed. Whe...See More
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 5:54pm

    Hiram Crespo



    Hiram Crespo Shana HT it seems like you default to Stoicism when you're down and to Epicurus when you're not down. Might it be that you lack Epicurean friends to support you in those times? Friendship is a huge boost to our confidence.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 6:31pm · Edited

    Donald Robertson



    Donald Robertson Well one way of answering that question would just be to say that the Stoics offer a wider variety of psychological strategies than the Epicureans, many of which have been assimilated into modern research-based psychotherapy and resilience training, wh...See More
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 10:40pm

    Mish Taylor



    Mish Taylor I don't see any conflict between Epicurean philosophy and modern research-based psychotherapy, they both promote the removal of anxiety, can you state any conflicts between the two? Whereas the impression I get from Stoic philosophy (the little I know ...See More
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 7 at 2:53am

    Cassius Amicus

    Write a reply...


    Donald Robertson



    Donald Robertson Well, to be honest, I was hoping to ask you guys some questions about Epicurean philosophy. I didn't plan to talk about it, although I feel a bit obliged to respond to some of the comments and questions about Stoicism in the thread. (The comparison with Epicurus and the Stoics came up in the article that was shared with me.) Would the admins prefer discussions about Stoicism itself to take place somewhere else, though?
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 4:54pm · Edited

    Ron Warrick



    Ron Warrick Anything requiring a lengthy reply re stoicism should be taken to the stoicism group I think.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 5:00pm

    Cassius Amicus



    Cassius Amicus We need the other admins to weigh in too; my comment is underneath......
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 5:02pm

    Elli Pensa



    Elli Pensa Mr. Ron Warrick We did not have the desire to visit the stoicism Group.from the starting point. Donald Robertson had the desire to visit us. We are here and we discuss with him what was, is and would be the goal according to the stoicism !! He said Virtue. Would you like to comment this goal ??
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 5:09pm

    Ron Warrick



    Ron Warrick Well, there are many virtues, and I am in favor of any that will lead to a pleasant life!. But intellectual honesty and humility make me hesitant to call such an outlook Stoic. I believe it is Epicurean.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 5:25pm

    Donald Robertson



    Donald Robertson Elli Pensa I've commented on it in some of my responses above.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 10:41pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Write a reply...

    Cassius Amicus



    Cassius Amicus Donald I understand why Ron said what he said, and the other admins may feel differently, but as far as I am concerned you are a special case and this thread is fine for most anything you want to talk about that is even tangentially related. Your work is well known and as long as we keep it largely within this thread where it doesn't keep popping up as new material I am fine with it. I don't think we want a series of separate posts about stoicism though, as Ron says.
    Like · Reply · 5 · March 6 at 5:01pm

    Elli Pensa



    Elli Pensa Donald I remind you what was the post of this thread : "Here you will do well to tarry. Here, we are Epicureans, our highest good is PLEASURE and we achieve it through the criteria of truth set forth in the Epicurean Canon. Please tell us clearly and specifically what is your highest good, and how you seek to achieve that goal for your students and in your own life. Thanks"
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 5:05pm

    Donald Robertson



    Donald Robertson Okay. See above.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 10:42pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Write a reply...

    Donald Robertson



    Donald Robertson I'm happy to answer questions about Stoicism to the best of my ability in this thread, if both admins are okay with that. Or people can private message me any comments they don't think are appropriate for this group. You might need to wait a few hours for my replies, though. I'm busy working on something else right now, but I'll check back in later. 1f609.png;)
    Unlike · Reply · 3 · March 6 at 5:26pm

    Cassius Amicus



    Cassius Amicus Minor point but FWIW there are four admins... More importantly, before we get too far afield I know several of us really what to hear you on your commentary on virtue and happiness and the highest good, as several posts have raised.
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 5:38pm

    Donald Robertson



    Donald Robertson I believe that virtue is a form of mental health in that it consists in the good or healthy functioning of our ability to reason about life. I believe that healthy and pleasant feelings follow as a consequence of that, sometimes but not always. So it's more reliable to focus our efforts on the underlying healthy functioning than on the supervening feelings, although when those occur they're like an added bonus. To put it crudely, it's more important to be good than to feel good. Or as modern therapists often put it, there's an important difference between "getting better" and merely "feeling better".
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 10:47pm

    Cassius Amicus



    Cassius Amicus "To put it crudely, it's more important to be good than to feel good." Well stated Stoicly - So WHY should we want to be good?
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 10:48pm · Edited

    Donald Robertson



    Donald Robertson Cassius Amicus Because our moral preconceptions are such that its more consistent for us to view virtue as an end in itself than to view it as a means to an end. So then we'd need to go through various examples to illustrate that, such as the one I mentioned earlier about what we praise in others, and also things like our intuitions about what happens in unusual situations where virtue would not be the most expedient way to achieve pleasure, or where virtue might be strongly valued despite being divorced from the possibility of experiencing pleasure as a consequence, etc.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 11:17pm

    Cassius Amicus



    Cassius Amicus But how do we know what is virtuous in any particular situation?
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 11:19pm

    Elli Pensa



    Elli Pensa Cassius Amicus Because you are doing your duty. It is a duty to be virtuous. Experience : once I've heard a parent who was a good stoic saying that in his child that was 17 years old : It was my duty and the fate to bring you in life and paying for all your expenses until now. Thus, you have the duty and the fate to listen, without any objection, to all of my orders what is good and what is bad for you. The results ? A slight depression to all the members of that family. And if you asked that stoic on happiness, he would say to you that all the members of his family, including himself, that were happy. In the question what he would do if any member of his family will be lost and die. He said in fully Apathy that it is the fate and Eimarmeni to be given back to the giver that is Nature who created by the gods. Could someone say that this father of my experience it was not a good stoic, as he kept his principles : Virtue, Duty, Fate and Apathy ? I do not know what the modern stoics claim about for that specific school of philosophy. If they did not keep their principles of their school, and, if they do not keep the teachings of their teachers.... where the heck are they based on ?!
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 7 at 5:10am · Edited

    Elli Pensa



    Elli Pensa Dimitris Liantinis was a professor of the greek philosophy in the University of Athens. He wrote a book entitled "Stoa and Rome". Here is an excerpt about stoicism :Image may contain: 1 person, standing and text

    Like · Reply · 1 · March 7 at 5:15am

    Cassius Amicus

    Write a reply...


    Kris Pliotis HAIRETE KAI YGIAINETE enjoy and be healthy to everybodyLike · Reply · 3 · March 6 at 6:55pm

    Donald Robertson There are so many nested comments now that I may miss some, and the nested threads are growing sometimes several comments at a time, so apologies if I don't reply to something. I've probably just not noticed it.Unlike · Reply · 4 · March 6 at 11:27pm


    Cassius Amicus Along the lines of that last general comment, it would be a shame if we do not get around to addressing several other issues that Epicurus considered critical, to contrast that with modern Stoicism, such as:1) What role, if any do gods play in human life?2) What happens to the individual consciousness at death?3) Do humans have any control over their affairs (any amount of free will) or is all life predetermined?Epicurus held these to be among the most vexing questions of life, and gave answers to them. Does modern Stoicism? If so, what are those answers? It is relatively easy to come up with answers from the classical stoics to most of these questions, but less so when I read the modern stoics.Like · Reply · 4 · March 6 at 11:40pm · EditedCassius Amicus Unfortunately I am going to be away from the computer for much of the day. In the meantime, to supplement the three topics I just mentioned (1-gods, 2-death, 3-free will) I also suggest that it will help to get to the heart of the matter if we consider not the stated reason, but the process by which Stoics conclude that they can justify holding virtue to be its own reward. Recall that Lucretius labeled Heraclitus as a muddy thinker who sought to impress with the obscurity of this thinking, When someone suggests that there is nous, or divine fire, or Zeus, or that there is some standard of excellence that we "just know" to be true, what is their process for determining that these things exist?The further out there and the more abstract and obscure the "reasoning" becomes, the more we should realize that it is divorced from commonly and easily available evidence of the senses to validate. And not only to validate - the assertion that there are supernatural gods, or idealistic standards of excellence contradicts other conclusions that ARE validated by the senses - first and foremost that nothing comes from nothing and nothing goes to nothing, at the whim of any god or for any other reason. And when we also validate through observation-based reasoning that the universe is composed of atoms and void in motion, and of that only, then all these theories about eternal absolutes and standards of excellence are seen to be impossible, and we are able to see that indeed only the faculties of pleasure and pain are given by nature for determining what is desirable and what is painful.I think this leads us to see clearly why it was so important that Epicurus did not hold "logic" or "reason" to be separate faculties and co-equal with the three categories of his canon of truth. Logic and reason have no separate and real existence any more than does nous or Zeus - logic and reason are simply names we give to mental processes that may or may not be consistent with the evidence provided by the three canonical faculties. Logic and reason cannot create evidence from nothing any more than atoms can be created from nothing, nor should they be allowed to contradict conclusions that ARE clearly supported by real evidence. But humans have free will, and the ability to imagine all sorts of things that are unsupported and contradicted by reality.So every assertion that there is a standard of excellence or virtue aside from the natural response of pleasure and pain has to be met with "What is the evidence for that proposition?" And when a stoic says that 'we just know" what excellence is, your personal sense of pain or pleasure may agree with that stoic's conclusion in a particular situation, and you may be tempted to think that the stoic might be on to something. But if you accept the stoic's contention that there is some other process besides the natural faculty of pain and pleasure which validates that conclusion, then you have accepted that it is valid to make an ethical assertion based on nothing but opinion. And when the stoic takes his next logical step, asserting that there is only one true virtue and one true excellence to which you should conform your life, you will find your confidence in the correctness of your own vision of happiness will be drained to nothing. Then like, Marcus Aurelius and stoic opinion leaders of today. as you find yourself watching your world disintegrate around you, rather than confronting hard realities and working to fix the problem, you will decide to "manage your emotions," "keep calm," "worry only about things that are under your control" and drift off into a never-never land where everyone "just gets along" and one mans' fantasy is as good as another's.Like · Reply · 4 · March 7 at 8:12am · EditedDonald Robertson I'll add a few more specific examples of the sort of arguments mentioned above. 1. Suppose some person attains a perfect state of pleasure. (I'll leave it for others to define, as it seems to me there's some disagreement among modern Epicureans about exactly how this should be defined, but that probably doesn't matter.) Compare that to another person who exhibits exceptional moral wisdom and courage. Let's suppose that (likely or not) they appear quite different in other regards: so the pleasure exemplar isn't known for virtue and the virtue exemplar isn't known for "pleasure". Does history not show that the majority of people tend to find the second type of person more admirable and praiseworthy? Is it not the case that those qualities better meet our preconception of what's supremely good in life? (Some people will undoubtedly disagree but I think most would agree with the above.) Suppose, for the sake of argument, that an Epicurean said that on reflection, he probably did find wisdom and courage, in themselves, more admirable than pleasure/contentment, or whatever. If his doctrine is that pleasure is the supreme good, that would appear to highlight a contradiction between his implicit moral values and his professed philosophy. That's the type of reductio argument, I would expect a Stoic to use with an individual Epicurean. (Again, there will be some individuals who simply reject the premises, but that's okay.) Someone else might admit they admire wisdom and courage (virtue) more than "pleasure" in other people, on reflection, but deny that's a problematic sort of contradiction. They might say they're happy admiring qualities in other people more than they desire them for themselves. The Stoics, though, would challenge that as hypocrisy and argue that we all should (and at some level do) desire to be consistent in our thinking, especially about such important matters as our moral values. I think they'd want to argue that there is a problem if we try to separate what we value most about the character of other people from what we value most for ourselves. They see that sort of conflict in our values as a sort of alienation from the rest of mankind. If what I actually admire most about other people is their wisdom and moral integrity then that sort of thing should be my priority for myself as well. On the other hand, if what I admire most about them is how pleasantly contented their life is, then that should probably be my own number one goal in life too. There aren't very many figures in history whom people admire for being like Epicurus in that respect, though. There are obviously many more examples of historical figures who are admired for what we call virtue, or strength of character. Now that's not intended as a proof, merely an illustration. The individual would need to reflect on their own moral preconceptions and determine whether they're being applied consistently or not, maybe by looking at the range of figures they most admire in life themselves (not merely the ones the rest of society admires).Like · Reply · 1 · March 7 at 5:50pm · EditedCassius Amicus A good and clear statement of your position - thank you.Like · Reply · 1 · March 7 at 5:54pmWrite a reply...Donald Robertson 2. Suppose someone is about to die in a moment (or just strongly believes that they are). They have a few seconds to make a decision about some important moral action. For instance, in the heat of battle they have the opportunity to give their life to save their comrades. For the sake of argument, lets suppose there's no possibility they're going to have an opportunity to actually notice any sensation of pleasure following this virtuous action. (This example is borrowed from Seneca, incidentally.) Would an Epicurean, based on his doctrines, choose to act "virtuously" in the conventional sense, by saving his comrades, despite the fact there's no opportunity for the consequent enjoyment of pleasure or contentment (or whatever)? The Stoics argue that many people's moral preconceptions would be that the right thing is to act courageously for the welfare of one's loved ones so a doctrine that potentially leads us to believe there's no point in doing so unless it contributes to a pleasant life, would leave them in a state of contradiction. Again, for some individuals, that would constitute a reductio ad absurdum. So I imagine some Epicureans might respond by arguing that they do still have a motive, based on Epicurean doctrine, for self-sacrifice in this case, but I've never seen a very clear articulation of that argument. So how would that actually work? On the other hand, I've known at least one modern Epicurean who took the opposite line and said he accepted that his doctrines would provide him with no motive for self-sacrifice in this scenario and that he found that morally acceptable. That's also fine, in a sense, although I think other people are more likely to see that as a kind of extreme morality and to struggle a bit more with the apparent contradiction there.Like · Reply · 1 · March 7 at 5:50pm · EditedMish Taylor Point 1/ Imagine, if you were a person who was wise, courageous & content, what a pleasure that would be! To top it all, you did not put A Nother on a pedestal to be admired or to measure yourself by.Like · Reply · March 7 at 5:43pmDonald Robertson 3. An example from Cicero, also mentioned by Epictetus. Suppose that an Epicurean sees someone they have reason to view as an enemy about to sit on a woodpile with a poisonous snake. They could easily say nothing, and nobody would ever know that they'd seen the snake and could have warned him. Or they could let him sit on it, be bitten, and die. Again, I've met Epicureans who said they'd be happy to do the latter. On the other hand, for many people that will conflict with their moral preconceptions. They'd think it's wrong. So the question for them would be why, as an Epicurean, should they avoid doing it, if there are no negative consequences for their own pleasure/contentment? One way around this would be to argue, as some ancient Epicureans did, that we're bound to be troubled by our conscience. However, that's a weak argument because we know now that "conscience" varies tremendously and many people have a negligible sense of distress in relation to things others consider unethical. (The extreme cases would be sociopaths, but many other people lack this sort of feeling or have it only to a slight degree, whereas other personality types are tortured by guilt over slight moral transgressions.) Again, this would constitute a reductio for some individuals, if they couldn't reconcile the argument that virtue is of value only as a means to "pleasure" with their moral intuition that allowing someone to die is wrong.Like · Reply · 1 · March 7 at 5:51pm · EditedElli Pensa Donald Robertson a friendly suggestion : If you want your text to be read by others, please put some enter/or paragraphs along the lines. It is very tiring to the eyes. ThanksLike · Reply · March 7 at 5:48pmAlexander Rios I believe that all of Donald's challenges listed above are handled in: Torquatus' Defense of Epicurus, plus the Epicurean Inscription of Diogenes of Oenoanda.Like · Reply · 2 · March 7 at 5:55pm · EditedDonald Robertson 4. Another thought-experiment that other schools used to question Epicurean ethics... Suppose you lived in a world populated by other Epicureans. Would that really be preferable to living in a world full of Platonists, Aristotelians, or Stoics? Would you, e.g., want other people to view your friendship as of value merely insofar as it contributes to their own "pleasure", in the Epicurean sense? (Some modern Epicureans dispute this claim about the instrumentality of friendship, whereas others strongly endorse it, as far as I can tell.) I've heard some people say, e.g., that what appeals to them most is being Epicurean, but for everyone else to be Stoic, i.e., to be virtuous toward them for its own sake. Again, that would arguably form the basis of another reductio. Although, as noted above, some people might say they're happy to accept that apparent contradiction, I think many others find it more troubling, on reflection.Unlike · Reply · 1 · March 7 at 5:55pm · EditedAlexander RiosUnlike · Reply · 3 · March 7 at 5:58pmAlexander RiosUnlike · Reply · 3 · March 7 at 6:00pmAlexander Rios I wish I lived in a world full of Epicureans.I'd rather put my life in the hands of my Epicurean friends, than any other people I have known in my entire life.Unlike · Reply · 2 · March 7 at 6:15pmWrite a reply...Cassius Amicus All four of these are well stated Donald. Thank you again! Nothing advances the ball like a clear statement of a position to which a clear response can be given. if you have more, please be sure to add them!Like · Reply · March 7 at 5:56pmDonald Robertson 5. The following thought-experiment was actually suggested to me by an Epicurean friend... What if there was a machine which could provide you with perfect pleasure. (Modern Epicureans seem to define "pleasure" in several different ways but just insert your definition here.) But it meant spending your life as a brain in a vat, i.e., in a way that many people's conventional moral intuitions would find troubling. Let's suppose there's no risk attached to this procedure -- it's pretty much guaranteed. Some Epicureans have told me that's fine and their doctrines would lead them to accept the procedure, and become a brain in a pleasure vat. I think other Epicureans would feel a conflict, once again, though. You could optionally add another criterion (version 2, let's call it) and make it that the procedure will half your IQ and reduce you to stupidity and a dreamlike state, but one in which you'll feel pleasure and contentment but lose all wisdom and intelligence. Some people may say that pleasure would only be worthwhile insofar as it's accompanied by something like wisdom or intelligence. Seneca points out that would mean pleasure is no longer the supreme good, though, but wisdom has supplanted it as more important, or at least a composite of them has become the supreme good. As Seneca points out, the Stoics value wisdom as the supreme good, upon which they claim joy and happiness are likely to supervene. So if that's what you want, that's actually more akin to the Stoic definition of the goal of life. Whereas the Epicureans, by contrast, generally appear to make wisdom of subordinate value to pleasure.Like · Reply · March 7 at 6:09pm · EditedMish Taylor Donald, I find your comments quite assumptive, regarding the stance of Epicureans, the arguments are the same old, same old, again quoting Epictetus and now the ridiculous point 5. Wisdom is also a pleasure!Like · Reply · 1 · March 7 at 6:07pmCassius Amicus Donald are you finished? Please be sure to give us all you have, and then in order to make this manageable I think we should probably break this down into separate posts for each point.Like · Reply · March 7 at 6:07pmCassius Amicus It might be logical to place a temporary hold on posts after you finish Donald, let me break them down into separate posts, and then unfreeze the thread (???)Like · Reply · 2 · March 7 at 6:08pmCassius Amicus Some people may post responses before I get these reorganized, or later on, but still each one deserves MUCH discussion, so I don't think Facebook will handle this without separating them. Please let me know when you are finished......Like · Reply · 2 · March 7 at 6:10pmCassius Amicus I am here and available to split these up as soon as you are finished Donald RobertsonLike · Reply · March 7 at 6:11pmDonald Robertson Sure, I can add another few arguments which are familiar from the Stoic literature and maybe Cicero, and try to phrase them in more modern language. I think these are the sort of arguments that ancient Epicureans obviously faced and their attempts to answer them quite probably shaped the evolution of their philosophy in some respects. (Just as the attempts to answer criticisms from Academic Skeptics and Epicureans apparently shaped the evolution of Stoicism.) So I think this is pretty much the sort of philosophy we should all be doing - considering these sort of thought experiments. Even if, as Epicureans, you reject them all, doing so will help many (if not all) of you sharpen your definitions and arguments and clarify your thinking about Epicurean ethics. We don't learn much just by talking to people who agree with us, but by trying to answer the common criticisms raised against our doctrines, I believe. That's why I think it's good, and very healthy, for Stoics and Epicureans to talk to one another.Unlike · Reply · 2 · March 7 at 6:13pmCassius Amicus Absolutely. Do you expect to finish soon or how much time do you need? I may start splitting now but it might be better to do them all at once when you finishLike · Reply · March 7 at 6:14pmDonald Robertson Well, it could go on, but let's say another half hour or so to give me time to look over some notes.Like · Reply · March 7 at 6:15pmCassius Amicus Ok I will wait and repost them all at once so they appear together in the timelineLike · Reply · March 7 at 6:16pm · EditedWrite a reply...Cassius Amicus If anyone posts comments/responses in the meantime I don't see any problems with that. I will try to move at least some of them into the thread of the new post after it is set up (but it won't be movable except as a rough cut and paste)Like · Reply · March 7 at 6:19pm · EditedCassius Amicus Unless I hear from Donald Robertson otherwise I will wait about 30 minutes from his post above (which currently says it is 11 minutes old ... Sure, I can add another few arguments which are familiar from the Stoic literature and maybe Cicero, and try to phrase them in more modern language. ...) and then start repostingLike · Reply · March 7 at 6:25pmDonald Robertson 6. From Epictetus... Epicureans believe that pleasure is the highest good. (Again, some people have actually disputed this but I think it's safe to say most Epicureans will go along with that claim, with the usual caveats.) However, most (if not all) pleasures have "intensionality", meaning that they are "about" something, the thing we take pleasure in. In other words, rather than just going around having free-floating pleasures, we're usually enjoying music, or the company of friends, or admiring some idea, or something. If we take pleasure in something, does it not seem (to many people if not all) that it makes more sense to say the thing being enjoyed is good rather than the feeling of enjoyment? When we take pleasure in something, isn't it often because we're judging it to be good at some level? (For Stoics, joy and pleasure, the passions not sensations, are defined as the belief that something good is present, or being experienced by us.) We actually have a transcription of Epictetus employing this as a reductio with an Epicurean who visited his school, incidentally. (Some people might claim it's a fabrication, which is fair enough, although there's nothing to indicate that.) If we take pleasure in something bad, are we willing to say that the pleasure is still good? For example, is pleasure taken in torturing small children still good? Or would we need to qualify it and say that pleasure is only good if its object is also good? That seems to introduce a much stronger caveat than is implied in the Epicurean definition of pleasure as the highest good, though. Moreover, pleasure can be good or bad depending on whether its object is good or bad, that implies it's actually morally neutral, or "indifferent", as the Stoics put it. Pleasure in itself is neither good nor bad. Pleasure in bad things, like harming people for fun, is bad; pleasure in good things, like helping loved ones, is good. However, that seems to suggest that it's really the object that is good or bad, in itself, and the feeling of pleasure is only good or bad decoratively, i.e., its actually indifferent in itself. Some people will disagree with those intuitions but for those who accept them, like the Epicurean in the Discourses, it seems to create a contradiction between their professed doctrines and the implications of their moral preconceptions, on reflection.Like · Reply · March 7 at 6:27pm · EditedDonald Robertson 7. Both Seneca and Epictetus argue that Epicurean philosophy encouraged its followers to view all friendships as fair-weather friendships, i.e., to value others only for their utility and not for their own sake, as means and not as ends in themselves. Again, it seems to me that some modern Epicureans actually agree that Epicurus taught this and are happy with it, whereas others dispute this interpretation of his teachings. "These are the so-called “fair-weather” friendships; one who is chosen for the sake of utility will be satisfactory only so long as he is useful. […] He who begins to be your friend because it pays will also cease because it pays." (Seneca). Again, reversing perspectives becomes problematic if we read Epicurus this way: you might want to view other people merely as a means to the end of "pleasure", or whatever, but would you want them to view you that way? This is also closely-related to the argument that it's problematic to imagine a whole state or a whole world of people following Epicurean philosophy, rather than an individual or a small community. Suppose you don't want other people to treat you merely as a fairweather friend, and to potentially abandon you as soon as they calculate that would be in their interest, in terms of pleasure. How do you reconcile that with the doctrine that friends are only of instrumental value? (Or do you reject that interpretation of Epicurus -- if so, what do you make of other Epicureans who do interpret the philosophy that way?)Like · Reply · March 7 at 6:35pm · EditedDonald Robertson 8. Seneca and others also object to the Epicurean doctrine that makes virtue of value only instrumentally, as a means to attaining pleasure, as follows. (Again, some modern Epicureans may dispute this interpretation of Epicurus, although others tell me they accept it and agree with it as a philosophy of life.) Someone who acts bravely for the sake of a reward, arguably isn't really brave at all. (Again, some people will accept this particular moral intuition, others will not.) To endure danger for money isn't real bravery, it's just greed. And the same would apply to rewards such as pleasure: acting bravely to win some reward as a consequence isn't really what we mean by bravery, on reflection. The same would apply to the virtue of temperance. Not snacking on chips for a week because someone's offered me a million dollars to do so, wouldn't, on the face of it, constitute praiseworthy (virtuous) self-mastery. It's the ability to control our desires in the *absence* of a strong reward for doing so that's actually required for the virtue of temperance. What about justice, kindness, and fairness? If I'm only treating other people kindly and fairly because I believe I'm going to gain some reward for so doing then arguably that's not really the virtue of justice at all. Doesn't the same apply if I see justice as indifferent in itself, and only of value as a means to obtaining "pleasure" (in the Epicurean sense)? So the Stoics, and others, argue that our preconceptions about virtue separate it from people acting in similar ways for personal gain, or pleasure. Someone who wants to preserve that conception of virtue but also professes to follow the Epicurean doctrine is arguably going to have to reconcile those two things somehow or accept that they're in contradiction.Like · Reply · March 7 at 6:48pm · EditedDonald Robertson Here's a review of similar arguments in Seneca, if that's any help, including more quotations from Epicurus and references to his teachings than I could include above:http://donaldrobertson.name/what-seneca-really-said.../What Seneca Really Said about EpicureanismDONALDROBERTSON.NAMELike · Reply · Remove Preview · March 7 at 6:49pmDonald Robertson Likewise, here's a review of Epictetus' comments about Epicurus, including quotes (allegedly) from Epicurus' writings and a transcription of a dialogue with an Epicurean philosopher who visited his school:http://donaldrobertson.name/epictetus-stoi…s.../Epictetus: Stoicism versus EpicureanismArticle outlining the criticisms of Epicureanism made by the Stoic Epictetus.DONALDROBERTSON.NAMELike · Reply · Remove Preview · March 7 at 6:50pmCassius Amicus I will keep those last two separate but thanks very much for adding them. Do you think you are finished for the moment after posting eight questions? Of course if you come up with others of similar nature in the future we can do them too.Like · Reply · March 7 at 6:51pm · EditedDonald Robertson Sure, yes, I think that's enough for now. Thanks.Like · Reply · March 7 at 7:14pmWrite a reply...Matt Jackson Hi Donald, I'm interested to know more about the Stoic cosmology and theology and how it relates to Virtue. From what I've gathered there is a "pantheistic reasoning God" called Zeus that fills the role of a Divine Principle. It appears that this being is "fragmented" among the various minds in the universe. It also appears that this being is not a separate entity like a Divine Mind or Nous, but rather a holistic "whole" of separate reasoning minds. It is from these individual reasoning minds that Virtue is conceived. I'm wondering though, is it safe to call this passive being a God? Since the "being" has no external reasoning capability outside of the individual minds that are it's many parts. Objectively, it would appear that it is not a God at all but rather a poetic description of the multiplicity of Nature, and not in any way actually Divine. This would become somewhat problematic for virtue's sake since relativism is rampant among the varied minds in the world (which can readily be seen everywhere). If this God is not autonomous that means he is actually bound to the will of individual reasoning minds. Thus we have varied interpretations of what virtue might be across various individuals and cultures.It is clear that this theological idea is very important because it relates DIRECTLY to Stoic virtue. In fact, I'm not sure how to proceed any further with a discussion of virtue without clarifying this point. Is this Zeus/God really a "passive" being subject to the contemplation of man? Or do we say that it is actually autonomous and "it" contemplates a standard of Virtue and is a judge? It seems this theological concept is the genesis of Stoic Virtue.Unlike · Reply · 2 · March 7 at 9:34pmWrite a comment...



  • An Opening Conversation With A Committed Modern Stoic - Prelude to "Eight Stoic Challenges to Epicurean Philosophy" - Part 1

    • Cassius
    • March 11, 2017 at 4:25 PM
    Elli Pensa

    March 6 at 9:34am

    I would like to welcome here Mr. Donald Robertson saying to him: Here you will do well to tarry. Here, we are Epicureans, our highest good is PLEASURE and we achieve it through the criteria of truth set forth in the Epicurean Canon. Please tell us clearly and specifically what is your highest good, and how you seek to achieve that goal for your students and in your own life. Thanks :)

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    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Thanks, Elli. I believe the highest good is virtue but I'm very interested in how the Epicureans define that concept.
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 9:57am

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus We have this from Diogenes of Oinoanda which makes clear that for Epicureans pleasure is the end of the best mode of life, and virtue is the means to that end, but not that end itself. Do you disagree Donald Robertson?


    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?» and they wanted to say «the virtues» (which would actually be true), it would be unnecessary to take any other step than to agree with them about this, without more ado. But since, as I say, the issue is not «what is the means of happiness?» but «what is happiness and what is the ultimate goal of our nature?», I say both now and always, shouting out loudly to all Greeks and non-Greeks, that pleasure is the end of the best mode of life, while the virtues, which are inopportunely messed about by these people (being transferred from the place of the means to that of the end), are in no way an end, but the means to the end.


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    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Yes, I disagree with that. It's an interesting theory, though.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 10:12am · Edited

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus I have read some of your material and I thought you would. It is my understanding that you have a much more clear vision of the differences between Epicurean and Stoic philosophies than many of the people who come here who describe themselves as Stoics.
    Like · Reply · 3 · March 6 at 10:16am

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Thanks. I'm genuinely interested to learn more about Epicureanism. It seems to me that the surviving literature we have can be difficult to interpret and sometimes leads to conflicting views about what Epicurus taught. So I'd be eager to learn more about what conclusions people have arrived at who have spent more time and effort studying this philosophy in detail.
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 10:22am

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus There is no doubt about that, Donald Robertson. There are many different influences that led to the coming together of this group, but one of the main ones for many of us was the book "Epicurus and His Philosophy" by Norman DeWitt. There are other au...See More
    Like · Reply · 3 · March 6 at 10:30am

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Cassius Amicus That's an interesting article. To be honest, though, I do think that it's relatively easy to produce textual evidence that conflicts with several of his comments about Stoicism. For example, they're portrayed as "sour and scowling" and yet joy (chara) and cheerfulness (euphrosunos) are two of the main "healthy passions" (eupaheiai) that should supervene on virtue in Stoicism, and these and other joyful emotions are very frequently mentioned positively in their surviving texts. Chrysippus, the third head of the Stoa, reputedly died laughing at one of his own jokes about an ass. We actually have surviving jokes and satirical poetry from Stoic authors, which shows that they embraced humour. So I don't think this happens to be a very historically accurate way of portraying the contrast between the two schools. (It's more like a caricature that was promoted by critics of the Stoics, similar to the caricature that Epicureans were merely crudely self-indulgent hedonists.) Likewise, his comments about class snobbery, etc., in relation to Epicurus, don't seem consistent with what we know about other contemporary schools of Greek philosophy, such as Stoicism. Zeno, the founder of Stoicism, was, at least by some accounts, left penniless by his shipwreck, and was not actually an Athenian citizen. Cleanthes, the second head of the Stoa, was famously poor, and watered gardens during the night to earn a living. So it's not really accurate of this author to imply that Epicurus was looked down on more than other philosophers because he was born on an island, and had humble origins. As I understand it Epicurus was nevertheless an Athenian citizen, unlike other well-known philosophers, who experienced prejudice for that reason. There are quite a few other things I'd have to question about what he says here. (E.g., contrary to what he implies, other Hellenistic schools, particularly Stoicism, frequently compared philosophy to medicine.) I'd say that as an overview of the position of Epicurus within the broader cultural and philosophical context of the time, it's definitely rather distorted, although it's nevertheless a good article and has some interesting ideas.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 11:28am

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus All those are fact issues that people will have to read the material and decide for themselves. For every one article like this from DeWitt, there are tens if not hundreds of those that take the opposite position, and truth is not determined by counting the number of witnesses or commentators.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 1:18pm

    Cassius Amicus

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    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa Your're welcome Donald. On the concept of Virtue I will try to say it as simple as I can. We open the doors from the rooms of pleasures with a mean that you the stoics [and we the epicureans] called it as Virtue (s). But sometimes when the experiences, the circumstances OR some persons strive us against our NATURAL goal that is pleasure, we can smash the doors with a hammer (called as Epicurean Canon) and enter inside the rooms of Pleasures. This action of smushing doors is of what we call it "swerve" or "clinamen" or "free will".
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 10:12am · Edited

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson I have a question for you. Cicero says that later generations of Epicureans modified the original doctrine that friends are valued solely as a means to pleasure to: "another more humane one, invented by these more modern philosophers, and never, as far as I know, advanced by the master himself, that at first, indeed, a friend is sought out with a view to one's own advantage, but that when intimacy has sprung up, then the man is loved for himself, all hope or idea of pleasure being put out of the question." Do you agree with Cicero's interpretation that this was a later (Roman?) modification of Epicurean ethics? Or do you believe that treating friends as an end in themselves, at some level, was always part of Epicurus' teaching? (I've seen modern Epicureans argue strongly over this, from conflicting perspectives.)
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 10:37am

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus As for me in response to that question, I do not doubt that as the years went by Epicurus' doctrines were watered down by compromisers, as Diogenes Laertius says as well in other regards. Whether the compromisers were Roman or Greek, I do not know. But I cannot imagine Epicurus compromising at all on the heart of his philosophy, which is that the faculty of pleasure is the guide of life given by Nature, and the motivator for all things to choose. So I cannot imagine that Epicurus himself would admit that there is any end in itself which comes before pleasurable living. Friends are perhaps the most important instrument toward the end of pleaurable living, but we are talking philosophy here in order to understand the big picture. And in terms of the big picture, the motivation to pleasure comes first, then the instrumentalities by which pleasure is achieved follow as means to the end. There is nothing disreputable about that, which is the implication of the criticism many have for it - it is Nature's way.
    Like · Reply · 4 · March 6 at 10:45am

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    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Thanks. The "modern" modification, Cicero refers to would also seem to me, at least prima facie, to conflict with Epicurus' Principle Doctrines concerning justice. So do you consider this quote attributed to Epicurus by Epictetus to be authentic? "Be not deceived, men, nor led astray, nor mistaken; there is no natural fellowship with one another among rational beings; believe me. Those who say the contrary are deceiving you and leading you astray with false reasons."
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 10:58am

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus I do not think that Epicurus would have stated the issue in those terms at all. That sounds like Epictetus' commentary and slant to me, because in fact I think Epicurus would consider his observation that friendship is the most important means to happ...See More
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 11:16am · Edited

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Cassius Amicus I take it he means there's no innate bond or duty of fellowship, though, which is surely what you're saying Epicurus' believed, isn't it? Please correct me if I'm wrong. (It may not be a direct quotation, of course, although Epictetus certainly seems to present it as one.)
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 11:31am

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Certainly from the point of view of any supernatural requirement, or any "ideal" requirement in the form of a Platonic ideal, or an Aristotelian essence, or "duty" requirement (which presumably would arise from one of those same sources I just listed) I think Epicurus would have rejected that. However the way you are asking the question does not exclude what Epicurus is saying, as Epicurus held that Nature has so constructed human affairs so that friendship is the greatest tool by which we acquire a blessed and complete life.
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 11:47am

    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa If I had the chance I would like to ask Cicero :

    WHAT has to do the basis that is the common benefit of the friends as well as WHAT has to do the measuring among pleasure and pain to place humans or friends as means for pleasure ? Since if the means fo...See More
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    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa 1. <<Epicurus was he who built up the theory of knowledge in his Canonic or Stichioticon, as named on the basis of multivalued logic and as it was based on the observation and experience of Nature. Epicurus dismissed as purely mental construct Aristote...See More
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    Hiram Crespo

    Hiram Crespo On innate bond or natural fellowship between people, I do not know of an Epicurus source that specifically addresses it that way but Hermarchus his sucesor did, and he believed there was such an innate fellowship

    https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=http%3…OaFZBRlhJkF3XtU

    Hermarchus on the Ethics of Vegetarianism and Treatment of…
    SOCIETYOFEPICURUS.COM

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    Hiram Crespo

    Hiram Crespo Also modern anthropology seems to confirm it

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    The Bonobo and the Atheist Book Review
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    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Hiram Crespo I quickly scanned the first article, but I think the basic debate would not be **whether** a "natural fellowship" exists, but what is the basis for it and the terms of it, with Epicureans arguing that it is something that Nature programs as a part of our motivation toward pleasure, but with non-Epicureans arguing that there is some independent duty or order of the universe independent of the pleasure directive.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 5:43pm · Edited

    Hiram Crespo

    Hiram Crespo Right, broadly (as I see it) it's the old nature versus culture; with the Epicureans believing we are good natured in our natural and healthy state, and the non-Epicureans sometimes believing that we are NOT good natured and need external, cultural coercion to force good-nature
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 7:05pm

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Hiram Crespo Well, where we started was with Cicero's contention that Epicurus saw friendship as of purely instrumental value whereas later Epicureans modified his theory and said that friendship begins out of instrumental value but grows into a relationship where the other is valued for their own sake. I don't think that really has much to do with nature versus culture debate, though.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 9:41pm

    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa Donald Robertson wrote : <<whereas later Epicureans modified his (Epicurus) theory and said that friendship begins out of instrumental value but grows into a relationship where the other is valued for their own sake>> ====> Citations please, of the sources by those you said as later epicureans.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 9:48pm

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Elli Pensa Books I and II of De Finibus. I posted the actual quotation from Cicero above.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 10:49pm · Edited

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Yes there are several hints of the later Epicureans falling away, such as when Torquatus hints at giving in to the logicians and says: "“Some members of our school however would refine upon this doctrine. These say that it is not enough for the judgment of good and evil to rest with the senses. The facts that pleasure is in and for itself desirable and pain in and for itself to be avoided can also be grasped by the intellect and the reason. Accordingly, they declare that the perception that the one is to be sought after and the other avoided is a natural and innate idea of the mind. Others again, with whom I agree, observing that a great many philosophers advance a vast array of reasons to prove why pleasure should not be counted as a good nor pain as an evil, consider that we had better not be too confident of our case. In their view, it requires elaborate and reasoned argument, and abstruse theoretical discussion of the nature of pleasure and pain."
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 10:53pm · Edited

    Cassius Amicus

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    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson "The control of experience was to him a categorical lmperatlve." I'd say the biggest problem modern Epicureanism has to face in relation to modern psychology is that there's a very large body of contemporary scientific evidence from the mental health field that shows "experiential avoidance" or the desire to directly control feelings of pleasure and pain, to be a predictor of mental health problems in the future. In one study, strength of agreement with the statement "anxiety is bad", e.g., was found by itself to correlate with increased risk of clinical anxiety and depression at long-term follow-up. I'd be interested to know how modern Epicureans might try to deal with these potential criticisms from the field of psychology:

    https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=https%…Xmcd_x8IxOhdeqQ
    Experiential avoidance - Wikipedia
    ) has been broadly defined as attempts to avoid thoughts, feelings, memories, physical sensations, and other internal experiences—even when doing so creates harm in the long-run.
    EN.WIKIPEDIA.ORG

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    Shana HT

    Shana HT THIS!


    Stoicism helped me out of clinical depression and anxiety in ways I don't see Epicureanism doing.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 11:51am

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Well, I'd just ask: are there actually any modern attempts to use Epicureanism as a psychological therapy? Isn't that partly what Epicurus would have wanted for his philosophy? Again, DeWitt says: "Epicurus scorned all philosophy that failed to regard psychiatry as its function." So is anyone actually doing that in a scientific manner? If so, surely they're bound to have to deal with the research literature and the obvious challenges certain findings there present for Epicureanism.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 12:10pm · Edited

    Shana HT

    Shana HT I'd love to know, there are some aspect of Epicurean philosophy that seems wonderful, and I'm trying to understand it too.


    I don't like to pick sides, I want the best of all of them.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 12:10pm

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson I reviewed the literature when I wrote The Philosophy of CBT and couldn't find any real references to modern evidence-based psychological therapies using Epicureanism as an inspiration. Albert Ellis did mention Epicurus in passing a few times, but tha...See More
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 12:14pm · Edited

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker Pardon my interjection, not being terribly familiar with EA beyond reading the wiki article, but you haven't shown that Epicurean philosophy is one primarily of avoidance. The telos isn't the avoidance of all pain, a negative state, it's pleasure, a positive state. I've never felt that Epicurean philosophy promoted an avoidant approach to life, it's all about directing effort towards pleasure.
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 12:13pm

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Jason Baker Attempts to control positive feelings such as sensations of pleasure are also known to be problematic. But in any case, is not ataraxia (the absence of pain or suffering) a major component of Epicurus' definition of the pleasant life?
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 12:16pm

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker I think ataraxia is better understood as an adjective describing pleasure, as in "undisturbed pleasures" as in the full cup analogy of pleasure, not as an end in itself.
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 12:24pm

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Jason Baker What about this? "The magnitude of pleasures is limited by the removal of all pain. Wherever there is pleasure, so long as it is present, there is no pain either of body or of mind or both."
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 12:26pm

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker Again, the full cup model. The goal is to fill the cup, life, to the brim with unmixed pleasures. When it is full, there is no room for anything else.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 12:28pm

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson "By pleasure we mean the absence of pain in the body and of trouble in the soul."
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 12:29pm

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson If that's what he means it's not psychologically true, is it? Increasing pleasurable sensations doesn't necessarily eliminate unpleasant ones.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 12:31pm

    Shana HT

    Shana HT Donald, well, if your high, it does 1f603.png:D
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 12:32pm

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Shana HT Not if you become paranoid. I used to be a drugs counsellor. People who are high very often also get anxiety attacks. Depends what drugs you're talking about, though.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 12:33pm

    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios When Epicurus was near death and in pain, he practiced the recollection of past pleasant events and conversations he had with friends. Epicurus says that having dull medium pains, still allows for many pleasures. I'm reminded of being in the hospital for appendicitis, and being pleased by my friends visiting, and smiles, and a pleasing TV show.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 12:43pm · Edited

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker Donald, Plato told us that pleasure has no limit and thus couldn't be the telos. Epicurus showed that pleasure does have a limit, that limit being the elimination of "pain in the body, and trouble in the soul." Ataraxia, tranquility, absence of pain, etc. are the limits of pleasure.


    Once the cup is full, there's no room in the cup for anything else. Any more pleasures poured in and the cup runneth over. If the cup is wormy, or full of rancid dregs, then no amount of wine is going to make you enjoy it. Fix the cup, clean it out, fill it up then drink and be merry, preferably in the company of friends. 1f609.png;)
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 12:53pm

    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios Sounds to me like "direct control of feelings" means "faking our feelings", it seems to mean "pretending to be happy", or as some people say "fake it until you make it". Self deception. Honesty is one of the three virtues that goes hand in hand with pleasant living.


    When we say control of experience it means choosing prudently, with an eye towards the long term consequences. We sometimes choose pains. We sometimes avoid pleasures. The long term consequences leading to a life of happiness or else some learning.No automatic alt text available.

    Unlike · Reply · 3 · March 6 at 1:12pm · Edited

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Within this subthread there are several things I have to reply to:


    1) Shana: "Stoicism helped me out of clinical depression and anxiety in ways I don't see Epicureanism doing." <<If you were clinically depressed then you definitely needed to see a doctor, not a philosopher.


    2) Donald Robertson is going straight to the attempt to find techniques ("attempts to use Epicureanism as a psychological therapy?") without defining the goal of life. That's exactly the criticism stated in the Wikipedia article I cited earlier. I submit that it **makes a difference** whether one builds one's approach to live on supernatural gods, on fear or hopes for death, or on what one chooses to identify as the goal of life. That's a series of steps that cannot be skipped.


    3) The cites about ataraxia are the same ones everyone will see when one approaches Epicurus from the modern English perspective, and one has to be ready for them. If you define the goal of life as "absence of pain" without any further reference to other statements by Epicurus, or without any other context, then Don's position is exactly where you arrive, as virtually all other modern commentators except for Dewitt, Gosling & Taylor, Nikolsky, and a maybe a few others. This is an issue on which any blurred line is a direct slide to stoicism.
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 1:26pm

    Ron Warrick

    Ron Warrick We have from Epicurus that anxiety is due largely if not entirely from fear of the gods or fear of death, and that the study of nature is therapeutic in this regard. So any approach to overcoming anxiety that is found to be counterproductive would perforce be rejected.
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 1:39pm

    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios Yes, imaginary events. Interaction with non-happy gods, and fear that sensation (and/or memory) continues after death. Also fear of pain, and fear of becoming a slave to unlimited desires.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 1:57pm · Edited

    Ron Warrick

    Ron Warrick If you can overcome fear of death, there is little to be anxious about that is not under your control. But there will always be some residual anxiety whenever life requires choices to be made.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 1:56pm

    Alexander Rios

    Alexander RiosImage may contain: text

    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 2:15pm

    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios All our emotions are naturally selected faculties. "Nature has given them to us" to help us navigate life on Earth. As well as senses, instincts and feelings (pleasant/painful).


    People who wish to deny their emotions are deceiving themselves and not listening to their nature given faculties. They will end up harming themselves.
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 4:29pm · Edited

    Hiram Crespo

    Hiram Crespo The intention is to live a life filled with pleasures, because it is the only one we have, and for this much attention was placed to choices and avoidances and to hedonic calculus. Epicurus was not tring to produce a clinical psychotherapy system. He w...See More
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 5:53pm

    Ron Warrick

    Ron Warrick Alexander Rios "Modern" stoics will say they are not about denying the emotions at all, merely tempering the destructive ones to a safe level.
    Unlike · Reply · 3 · March 6 at 6:17pm · Edited

    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios Ron Warrick , yes. Agreed.


    I am responding to the accusation that Epicurus is about "direct control of feelings", which science has shown fails.


    Epicurus teaches to value/listen to our natural faculties, He does not teach us to try to "control"/dampen/override or trade/swap/reassign them.
    Unlike · Reply · 3 · March 6 at 8:23pm · Edited

    Ron Warrick

    Ron Warrick Alexander Rios It gets very semantic, but surely you don't mean that we don't eat to alleviate our feelings of hunger. Or perhaps this is considered indirect control? And isn't the technique of asking "What will happen if I do/do not act upon my desire?" meant to have direct effect on our feelings?
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 8:54pm

    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios Ron Warrick


    Yes, we eat to remove the pain of hunger. We do not deny our suffering. Hunger is unpleasant. Not sure that I would say I was sad, angry, or fearful.


    We have a whole range of emotions (happy, sad, angry, fearful) and all kind of shades of those. All of those emotions can be categorized into pleasant and unpleasant feelings. By feeling I mean one of: pleasant or unpleasant.


    Regarding your " meant to have a direct effect on our feelings". Hmm. You raise a good point. I have always thought that we do that to predict the consequences of our choices by the process of imagination. A simulation.


    But as you point out, the simulation is also affective. It has emotional effects, which are either pleasant or unpleasant. And those often drive our eventual choices, so we let them help us choose. We follow them.


    We don't let the simulation run, detect sadness then practice telling ourselves that our sadness "ought to be" admiration or terror or bliss, and brainwash ourselves to pretend those instead of sadness, because of my hunger.
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 9:22pm · Edited

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson It seems to me that the discussion has kind of strayed a bit from the psychological point at stake. There are a number of different psychological problems associated with strongly judging unpleasant feelings to be bad, and with attempts to try to elim...See More
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 9:56pm

    Ron Warrick

    Ron Warrick Donald Robertson OK. Not sure what this has to do with virtue being a greater goal than pleasure.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 10:03pm

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker Donald, what does your "psychological point" judging "that a feeling is bad" have to do with Epicurean philosophy? We don't have to analyze our feelings to the point of neurosis, we experience them directly!


    Can you point to where the Epicurean canon describes standing in judgement of our own feelings, analyzing them rationally? It feels like you're confusing desire and feelings. They aren't the same thing. Please correct me if I've misinterpreted.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 10:10pm

    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios Donald,

    Regarding "judging unpleasant emotions to be bad"


    What do we mean by "bad" here?

    "Incorrect? Faulted? Errored?"


    Why would we assume that our human nature has failed? We don't.

    The emotion is correct. The feeling is correctly unpleasant. Our soul (nervous system) is not confused, troubled, or corrupted.


    The situation is unpleasant and our judgement is correct. We don't need to pretend that the situation is ok.
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 10:52pm · Edited

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Ron Warrick Well if we make pleasure the supreme good in life there's reason to believe, from modern scientific research in psychology, that can be counter-productive. Whereas if we focus on the value of healthy functioning (virtue) as our priority we get around that problem and potentially experience an improvement in feelings anyway as a consequence.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 10:53pm

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Jason Baker No, I'm not sure I understand what you're saying but it doesn't sound at all like what I've been talking about so there must be some crossed wires somewhere. 1f615.png:/
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 10:54pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus 'l if we make pleasure the supreme good in life there's reason to believe, from modern scientific research in psychology, that can be counter-productive." Counterproductive by what standard? Why would we want to be healthy if not for the pleasure that being healthy brings?
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 10:55pm

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Alexander Rios It doesn't really matter, it's the negative value judgement itself that seems psychologically important and the implications that has for attention, elaborative thinking, avoidance, etc.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 10:55pm

    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios "For the reasons I have stated, we must always pay close attention to our perceptions from the senses, to our feelings of pain and pleasure, and to our mental apprehensions from the anticipations [[instincts]], both those we receive ourselves, and thos...See More
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 10:56pm · Edited

    Ron Warrick

    Ron Warrick Donald Robertson This seems to just be begging the question again. What value does this virtue of healthy functioning have other than pleasure or restoring our capacity for pleasure?
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 10:56pm

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Cassius Amicus Counter-productive in the sense that it contradicts itself, by producing the opposite of what it's aiming at.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 10:56pm

    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios Good night guys/gals. TTYL.


    Most of all, we must keep our investigations strictly in accord with the evidence of the senses. We must ensure that we keep our conclusions consistent with those things we have already clearly grasped through our sensatio...See More
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 11:04pm · Edited

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus If a particular person's choices in how to produce pleasure in fact bring pain rather than pleasure, then of course by Epicurean standards those choices should be revised, but why would anyone ever change that course to refocus on actually achieving pleasure unless his goal is to achieve pleasure?
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 11:00pm

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Ron Warrick No, I don't think it's question-begging. Perhaps the fundamental schism between Stoics and Epicureans has always been that Epicureans assume that virtue must be a means to some end, whereas the argument the Stoics make is that we should vi...See More
    Unlike · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 11:00pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus That is indeed the ultimate question. Why should virtue be considered an end in itself?
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 11:01pm

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Cassius Amicus But what would not have changed is the fact that they value pleasure as the highest good, of course, which is the point at stake.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 11:01pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus We seem to be agreed that the question of whether virtue is its own reward is the ultimate issue. And so why do you personally maintain that it is?
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 11:02pm

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Cassius Amicus Well one short answer would be that we have a variety of different moral intuitions or preconceptions that conflict, on reflection, with the position that virtue is only of instrumental value. For example, to pick one, it might be argued that we (or at least many of us) don't tend to admire or find praiseworthy others who make pleasure their highest goal in life. So treating it as our own supreme good would, in that case, arguably be a double standard. (Of course, some people will reject that premise, and so the argument would become more involved or another angle would have to be adopted on the question.)
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 11:05pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus And thus Cicero argued that it was disreputable to advocate pleasure in the forum or the camp. But that is hardly a philosophical proof is it?
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 11:07pm

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Cassius Amicus I think it does constitute a philosophical argument, though, if the person to whom you're speaking concedes that they have moral intuitions that, on reflection, conflict with what's being said. That's a form of reductio ad absurdum, in fact. The problem is that some readers will deny that they have those preconceptions or intuitions but then the argument can arguably be revised to elicit examples of other situations where they do conflict.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 11:25pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus And what do you believe Donald Robertson is the source of these moral intuitions?
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 11:31pm

    Ron Warrick

    Ron Warrick Early day tomorrow. I look forward to hearing more supporting arguments for why virtue is an end in itself.
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 11:39pm

    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios Donald Robertson


    Moral intuitions? As proximate or ultimate explanations?

    Proximate. I think.


    You have to press people hard to get an ultimate explanation.


    Christians post-rationalize their actions with appeals to virtue. So will Muslims and other religious folk.


    But they also believe that virtue is the criteria that their gods will use to judge whether they are worthy of eternal, maximal happy living they hope for in Heaven, Paradise. This eternal happy living is what they seek.


    And the non-religious believe that virtue is the criteria that their peers will use to include/exclude them from the happy living that comes from friendship. And non-religious loners believe it should be the criteria.


    Humans are Homo Sapiens. We are Apes. We are social mammals. We are mammals. We are animals. We are alive.


    Most of what we do is because of what we are. What motivates Apes? Social mammals? Animals? Life forms? The answers apply to us too.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 7 at 9:07am · Edited

    Hiram Crespo

    Hiram Crespo I am not sure that virtue and healthy functioning are the same thing. If what is meant is efficiency, expediency, or opportunity, then why do they not use those words? Virtue is vague and not clearly discernable when we study nature, much less when people claim virtue in culture. There is a huge push toward establishing a theocracy in the US and many who are trying to get us to degenerate into a theocracy claim to be virtuous to mask their thirst for power. In Islam, a virtuous man must beat his wife if she disobeys as per Quran 4:34. Polystratus argued that not knowing that pleasure is the end our natures seek is the source of all evil. This is why we should align our choices and avoidances with the pleasure and aversion faculty, and never set an end result that is arbitrary like obedience, or a deity. I am not sure that I have come across a definition of virtue that is clear and can not be thwarted easily by cultural corruption.
    Like · Reply · 3 · March 7 at 8:47am

    Ron Warrick

    Ron Warrick I think Zeno-ist Stoics did argue that any shortfall in virtue represented unhealthy functioning, though they were primarily talking about mental functioning. And I think they would argue that nothing in their philosophy is arbitrary, but is based on reason, which is the driving force of the universe. Don't ask me how this assures happiness, given the lack of evidence that nature cares about our individual happiness.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 7 at 8:57am

    Cassius Amicus

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    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Interesting. So do you agree with this interpretation of Epicureanism from the article above? "In spite of this teaching it was not the doctrine of Epicurus that pleasure was the greatest good. To his thinking the greatest good was life itself. This was a logical deduction from the denial of immortality. Without the afterlife this present life becomes the concentration of all values. Pleasure, or happiness, has its place as the end, goal or fulfillment of living."
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 11:48am

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Dewitt is addressing there in short form what he addresses at greater length in his book. His basic point is that pleasure and pain have meaning only to the living, and so that life itself is a precondition of ethics having any meaning at all. Dewitt also has a lengthy discussion of what the "greatest good" means in his "summum bonum fallacy" argument. So there are lots of subtleties but yes I agree with those observations. The dead have no ethics, no god, no afterlife, no nothing. This is related to what Jefferson said, "the earth belongs in usufruct to the living - that the dead have neither powers nor rights over it." Meaning that all discussion of ethics presupposes that we are talking about living beings.
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 11:55am

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson For example, the quote you posted above from the inscription of Diogenes of Oinoanda saying "pleasure is the end of the best mode of life", appears to contradict DeWitt's interpretation of Epicureanism in that passage, does it not? If there's a "best mode of life" then life itself cannot literally be the supreme good, because life in some modes is better than life in other modes, so the supreme good would presumably have to be defined more specifically either as the specific mode of life of which Diogenes is speaking (presumably the pleasant life), or as one of its components (presumably pleasure). But it can't be, contrary to what DeWitt says here, merely that life in itself is literally the supreme good for Epicurus. Or do you interpret these two passages as somehow being compatible with one another? I'd be interested to know.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 11:59am · Edited

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus This is essentially a good restatement of the Platonic argument. There must be a highest and best and if you can take a word which allows for something supposedly higher and better then that can't be "the" goal of life. It becomes necessary to talk ...See More
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 1:31pm

    Ron Warrick

    Ron Warrick Donald Robertson We'd have to square "life is the highest good" with "He will on occasion die for a friend". I don't think that can be done.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 1:41pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus "...contrary to what DeWitt says here, merely that life in itself is literally the supreme good for Epicurus." << We might want to check the exact text as contained in the full book, but the point is reconciled by observing that none of the ethics discussion has any meaning, so that life is the PRECONDITION and therefore the greatest ASSET which one has, but that pleasure is indeed the GOAL for how life is to be used, and if one can no longer live pleasurably then it makes sense to leave the stage when the play ceases to please us. We're talking about different things when we're talking about "greatest goods" and "guides to life"
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 1:45pm

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Ron Warrick Well, yes, that would also seem to be a problem here.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 9:58pm

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Cassius Amicus Well greatest good seems like a fairly simple concept to me, but I could be wrong. Surely life being itself the supreme good and life being a precondition of the supreme good are two very different claims. To put it another way, for Epicurus, would a life full of pain and suffering be as good/desirable as a life of pleasure and contentment? Presumably not. So it's difficult to see how life, in itself, could be the supreme good, in that case.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 10:03pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Write a reply...

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus ""The control of experience was to him a categorical lmperatlve" - That is a DeWitt expression, if I recall, with the point of Epicurus not to foreshadow Kant tbut simply to point out that the control of experience is how we obtain pleasure and avoid pain. I will look at the cites you mentioned. Of course there are many people who are mentally unhealthy, but that does not negate the existence of mental health.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 11:50am

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    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Sure but any psychological strategy that emphasizes the goal of controlling subjective feelings of pleasure or displeasure is now known to be potentially counter-productive, especially for people with existing diagnoses. That's not a fringe-theory, it's a central component of virtually all modern evidence-based psychotherapy.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 12:01pm · Edited

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Don I am not able to address your observations about psychotherapy without studying them. I am sure there are many people whose psyches have some dysfunction that disposes them to problems, and I am sure that treatment of those conditions can involve not only medication but also therapies to which you allude. But I would never judge the correctness or incorrectness of a philosophy, which seeks to cover the big picture of physics, epistemology, and ethics, primarily by looking at sick people.
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 12:00pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Without getting too far into major weeds, which would require lots of details to address, I find this excerpt from Wikipedia to sound very reasonable:


    Philosophical concerns with CBT methods[edit]...See More

    Cognitive behavioral therapy - Wikipedia
    EN.WIKIPEDIA.ORG

    Like · Reply · Remove Preview · 1 · March 6 at 12:01pm

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Cassius Amicus Sure but as Epicureans, if you don't mind me saying, isn't it part of your philosophy to keep abreast of scientific evidence in the field of psychology or psychopathology that would have significant implications for Epicurean ethics or m...See More
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 12:03pm

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Cassius Amicus I think especially as a lay person approaching scientific research, it's important to look at the big picture. There are criticisms of CBT research but (like with climate change skepticism) that shouldn't be allowed to obscure the fact that there's a clear overall consensus among most researchers in the field that CBT is proven effective for a range of common anxiety and depressive disorders (by many hundreds of high-quality independent research studies). That's what matters here. As an aside, the research on experiential avoidance isn't usually criticised by the humanistic/psychodynamic camp who are critical of CBT. They actually tend to agree with the findings in that area.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 12:07pm · Edited

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Here's a typical study:

    https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=http%3…xkoR8j-Zl5cikH4
    Experiential avoidance as a generalized psychological vulnerability: Comparisons with coping and emotion regulation strategies
    Extending previous work, we conducted two studies concerning the toxic influences of experiential avoidance (EA) as a core mechanism in the development and maintenance of psychological distress, and disruption of pleasant, engaging, and spontaneous activity. Of particular interest was whether EA acc...
    SCIENCEDIRECT.COM

    Like · Reply · Remove Preview · March 6 at 12:19pm

    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa Ι' m sorry that this video at the youtube is not in the english language to understand many issues on psychology and psychotherapy. This video is from an event held in Athens and based on the book by Philodemus “on frankness of speech” translated by our epicurean friend Christos Yapijakis professor in the Department of Neurology, Medical School, University of Athens, and founding member of the Friends of Epicurean Philosophy “Garden of Athens”

    In this event were also some famous professors and physicians in the University of Athens, USA etc. All from the field of psychotherapy, physicians of Neurology, Endogrinology and Philosophy. All of them argued and were agreed that the FATHER of Psychotherapy was the Athenian philosopher Epicurus !


    https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=https%…xVAK5Myyx36SzwU
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 12:47pm · Edited

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Ok it appears the response I need to make to this thread is the same as stated otherwise. IT MAKES A DIFFERENCE whether one believes that the universe was created and directed by a god, whether one believes that after death is punishment or reward, whether one believes that living pleasurably is the goal of life or "being a good person" is the goal; whether one believes that one has any control at all over one's destiny, and similar questions about the nature of existence. I am not hearing any of those issues addressed in this discussion of clinical techniques and it is really bewildering to me how one can jump into a discussion of recommending therapeutic techniques without first identifying the nature and the natural goal of the people to whom we are giving advise.
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 1:34pm

    Ron Warrick

    Ron Warrick Donald Robertson Aren't the psychotherapies you favor aimed at "the control of experience"? What are they aimed at, then, virtue?
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 1:43pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus And following up on Ron's question, have you yet defined for us what "virtue" means in your opinion Donald Robertson?
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 1:47pm

    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa Shana HT I beg your bardon ?? Did you say that your depression is healed by stoicism ?? But this ideology IS under the regime that the goal of life is : <Virtue>> that is usually based on abstract opinions of other persons BECAUSE is not measured by a standard and a natural feeling AS our faculty that is PLEASURE !!! And this goal of Virtue is in accordance with 1) the necessity i.e. Fate-Destiny, 2) the pressure of your emotions i.e. the Apathy, and 3) any of your action that it should be i.e. your Duty !!!!???

    What the heck has to do the above things and issues with the field of the science of Psychology, Psychiatric, Neurology, Endocrinology, Psychotherapy, Philosophy etc etc ? All the above issues are against YOUR autonomy, YOUR freedom of thinking, YOUR freedom of speech, YOUR freedom of acting and YOUR freedom to change laws that are not beneficial any more.!!!! These things are against the happiness and the feelings of pleasure of any person indeed. All these issues are confirmend now by the evidences that are leading to a leader or a savior or the worse they lead in a pantheistic deity of a god.

    I wonder now is this science, is this philosophy WHAT THE HECK IS THIS ??!!
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 2:16pm · Edited

    Ron Warrick

    Ron Warrick Elli Pensa Needs more CAPITALS and exclamation marks!!!! 1f642.png:)
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 2:50pm

    Hiram Crespo

    Hiram Crespo Also, rather than assume or insinuate that most Epicureans in antiquity were coming from a place of anxiety or mental illness when they attempted to control experience, is it not fair to assume that the most mature and philosophically developed of them came from a place of confidence, and that they were training others in developing that confidence? We have addressed here in this group the idea of "confident expectation" in the writings, for instance, as one of the benefits of friendship. And when that confidence is in evidence, anxieties (many of which are COMPLETELY natural and based on lacking access to the natural and necessary goods, and therefore nothing to be ashamed of) naturally vanish.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 6:17pm

    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa Mr. Ron Warrick Why not ? The authentic ancient greek language was written with Capital letters, as it is in the attached photo. Hope you know from where is this text and what is written on it !!No automatic alt text available.

    Like · Reply · March 6 at 6:35pm

    Ron Warrick

    Ron Warrick Different styles are appropriate to different times and mileus.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 6:49pm

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Elli Pensa Epicurus hasn't had much influence on psychotherapy, though. He's virtually never mentioned. So I doubt most therapists would agree with the claim that he's ultimately the father of the whole field. And anyway, what about Pythagoras and Socrates who also employed the medical analogy for philosophy but predated Epicurus?
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 10:05pm

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Ron Warrick Mainly at improved functioning. Also, improvement in subjective feelings is a consequence but it's not the aim focused on by the individual themselves, which is what makes the difference. If I want a client to be less anxious that doesn't cause the same problem. If they are afraid of anxiety, or think it's shameful, or just bad, then they may pay more attention to it than normal, which can perpetuate it and make it more easily triggered. Also, they may try to distract themselves from it, or suppress it, which can also perpetuate it, and may have the side-effect of interfering with normal behaviour, e.g., with socially anxious clients, trying "not to feel anxious" can increase cognitive load and make them struggle to find their words when speaking to other people. (Just one of many examples.)
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 10:09pm

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Cassius Amicus I believe that there are, at least superficially, many different virtues but they all consist in moral wisdom applied to different aspects of life, or recognizing what is good and bad. Virtue is therefore also the healthy functioning of the mind, or more specifically reasoning well about life, which once again would equate with practical wisdom. One of the main indicators of reasoning well is consistency, or not contradicting ourselves in thought or action. So wisdom is also a kind of internal harmony or integrity. That includes not applying a "double-standard" by praising/admiring qualities in others that conflict with those we seek to achieve ourselves. Virtue is therefore both healthy and praiseworthy (or "honourable"), in that sense.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 10:16pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus And what is "good" and "bad"? By what standard. Why should one care about being healthy?
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 10:36pm

    Ron Warrick

    Ron Warrick Donald Robertson Why does someone want or need improved functioning unless their condition is causing them to suffer?
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 10:49pm · Edited

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Ron Warrick Well that's basically the "Why is virtue its own reward" question in another form. Again, there are several lines other schools of philosophy may take on this. One would be that we have certain preconceptions that commit us to thinking of...See More
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 11:12pm

    Ron Warrick

    Ron Warrick Donald Robertson So, it seems to be a philosophy geared heavily toward being admirable, i.e., the opinion of others. I'm not sure that is a guarantee of a flourishing life. At least many philosophers deny that it is.
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 11:22pm

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Ron Warrick No. You've misunderstood. It's almost the opposite of that. Other people's opinions are classed as indifferent in Stoic Ethics. I'm referring to whether the individual him or herself views a quality as being genuinely admirable, on reflection. That's very different from what you're describing: whether they think *other people* would find something admirable.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 11:28pm

    Ron Warrick

    Ron Warrick Donald Robertson OK. Still instrumental in my view. I know I would suffer if I did not create standards for myself and work to uphold them. And it is pleasurable (usually!) to create and uphold them. So, as long as I get to choose all the virtues on the basis of what will please me I could live "as if" virtue were the goal of living.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 11:36pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Write a reply...

    Mish Taylor

    Mish Taylor Personally, I find no fault in having, adopting or acquiring a positive mental attitude, this to me is one of the main things that comes across in the philosophy of Epicurus. Most forms of 'talking therapy', self help & etc are simply old ideas dressed up in modern language.
    Unlike · Reply · 4 · March 6 at 1:45pm

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson I'd say that's half-true. Modern therapy recycles many old ideas. However, it's definitely not true that no progress occurs. To pick the cliched example... It used to be believed that panic disorders were biologically determined and virtually untreatable by talking therapy. (For several reasons.) However, in the mid 1980s a huge advance was made by David Clark in the UK, which took the therapy for this condition from "zero to hero" and it is now shown to have one of the highest success rates of any form of psychological therapy.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 10:21pm

    Cassius Amicus

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    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa Donald Robertson Your are kindly requested to not call Epicurean Philosophy as Epicurean-ISM. Epicurean philosophy has nothing to do with ideologies or obsessions like Communism-Nazism-Capitalism, Christianism, Budhism, Islamism etc,. Because Epicurean philosophy is a philosophy that is confirmed by the the science and has the suffix "Y" as we say PsychologY, PsychiatrY, NeurologY, EndocrinologY, PathologY etc, we say the SAME the Epicurean PhilosophY. Thanks in advance for your understanding. 1f642.png:)


    If someone would like to find a list with -isms he will find here in this link :https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=http%3…xmhcTGzFQPTyuAQ


    As we realize there is not at that list the Epicurean Philosophy as Epicurean-ism.

    but there is the "stoicism" and is explained as "a belief in indifference to pleasure or pain" !!

    Word List: Isms
    Definition of words for belief systems and isms
    PHRONTISTERY.INFO

    Like · Reply · March 6 at 2:41pm

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    Ron Warrick

    Ron Warrick This is hypersensitive, methinks.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 2:46pm

    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa No, this was not any hypersesitive thing Mr. Ron Warrick. It is after analysis, after examination on the words. After some written articles and works by our epicurean friends. And finally after many hours of conversations made among our epicurean friends in the greek Gardens and the Symposia.Thanks.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 2:59pm · Edited

    Shana HT

    Shana HT but where is the science, then?
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 3:03pm

    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa Shana HT In the usage of the Epicurean Canon is the whole science my dear.

    Do you know how to use this epistemic tool ?? Did you read something for this method ?
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 3:07pm

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Well, I don't want to offend anyone but to be honest, I don't really share your beliefs about the connotations of those words. As I understand it most authors still use the term "Epicureanism", and find that accepable, so I think eliminating it would be a bit cumbersome and seems unnecessary. But what do others think? Is this a common feeling among your group?
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 3:19pm

    Ron Warrick

    Ron Warrick Donald Robertson This is the first I have heard of the complaint, but it is something we can take up in the group later. No need to involve you just now.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 3:43pm

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker Why not just shorten it to E-ism and Epicurus to Mr. E? 1f609.png;)


    Looking at the late date that -ism entered the English language, it likely doesn't have the same connotation when we use it as when our Greek friends use -ismos in their own language. Given our wholesale appropriation of Greek morphology, I'm happy to defer to the original understanding and use the preferred Greek form Epicurean philosophy instead of Epicureanism when discussing it here amongst friends.


    Perhaps if there ever were an incorporated Epicurean Church, using the -ism form in reference to it would be appropriate. In the meantime, does shortening it to Epicureanism save us so much time that it serves our purposes to be so imprecise? Precise language is one of the things that differentiates the ancient Epicurean school from the rest, one of the main complaints against the Garden by its detractors even, iirc.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 4:12pm · Edited

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus I see Elli posted more on this at the link below, so I will add my comment there - https://www.facebook.com/groups/EpicureanPhilosophy/permalink/1251189141596710/‎Elli Pensa‎ to Epicurean PhilosophyMarch 6 at 4:34pm ·

    For my epicurean friends of here I translated into the English language some pages of the article entitled “Epicurean philosophy or Epicureanism”, by Dimitris A...

    See More

    Like · Reply · Remove Preview · 1 · March 6 at 4:40pm

    Hiram Crespo

    Hiram Crespo I don't feel strongly about 'isms', but I understand that some others do. It may have to do with the Platonizing influence of language in the abstract of in the singular instead of plural. It helps to more accurately describe nature.
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 7:07pm · Edited

    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa Platonizing yes, but also it has to do with the masses Hiram.and our philososphy has first priniciples to start from the PERSON and his uniqueness.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 6:39pm

    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa As we read in Liantinis’ book entitled : “STOA & ROME”, we see that the suffix –ism has its origin from the Latins !


    Here we are...


    from a remarkable excerpt of Dimitris Liantinis book "STOA AND ROME":

    [...“ The big difference at the spiritual attitude of the Greeks and the Romans”.

    This difference is indicating at the type of the linguistic fossils of the two cultures that survived in the modern world. The Global Greek words like music, philosophy, theater, geometry, mathematics, physics, astronomy, political, architecture, demos-democracy, words that they declare a youth's shininess and a weight of quality towards to the conditions that the Latin language has saved. Under the conventional shape of : “ismus” the rescue to the terms of the Latin language expresses : the team, the indiscriminate, the unexceptional. But the enviable uniqueness is missing. Eg rationalism (ratio), potentialism (potentia), Imperialism (imperium), socialism (socius), Pacifism (pax), militarism (miles), Realism (res), pessimism (malus), optimism (bonus) etc...]

    --------------------------------------

    According to the above excerpt of Dimitris Liantinis, when we say epicurean-ISM we are missing this “enviable uniqueness of the person”. And the epicurean philosophy, has for first principles the uniqueness of the PERSON and not to the impersonal of the MASSES. Thus, for our proper thinking if we use epicureanism and not epicurean philosophy in our terminology and in our reference... our view for the Epicurean Philosophy collapses...and collapses (to use one of his own Liantini's words ) συγκορμοδεντρόριζη “syngormodentrorizi”(=tree trunk with its roots). 1f642.png:) Thank you !


    «I was never anxious to please the mob. For what pleased them, I did not know, and what I dο know, was far removed from their comprehension (Epicurus). All the above was in one of my comments as stated from 23 of July 2014.
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 7:00pm

    Ron Warrick

    Ron Warrick I think it is a category error to conflate a philosophy and its adherents. The adherents may be individuals while the philosophy is uniform.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 8:46pm

    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa Who said that we the epicureans are adherents or followers? We are students and we study the specific, genuine, and true hellenic philosophy that was given by Epicurus and his friends who are studied the Nature. The epicureans keep their first principles, and among other pupils of other philosophies were, are and will be the only persons who keep the scientific method all of their written works to be based on sources and making reference to these sources.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 8:59pm

    Ron Warrick

    Ron Warrick Elli Pensa Fine. Change the word to "students" and I still stand by my point.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 9:03pm

    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa I do not understand your point on the issue of our epicurean first principles. As we say our first principles start from the person, Epicurus addressed to the person and not TO the masses. He had not a willing to be a leader. He was a philosopher and every individual studies his philosophy which is based on the observation of Nature.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 9:09pm

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker This reminds me so much of the arguments about collective vs. individual rights in Con Law.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 9:30pm

    Ron Warrick

    Ron Warrick Elli Pensa I don't think an "-ism" implies anything about whether the ideas are for the individual or for the masses.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 10:01pm

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson It seems to me that in modern English -ism is just a generic suffix that's commonly used to denote a cluster of ideas related to the root word. And it's commonly used precisely to avoid any specific connotations about the sort of thing being referred ...See More
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 10:26pm

    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa Donald Robertson I explained further with an article that I already posted what means ISMS and where they lead...TO THE IDEOLOGIES. As it is well known the Epicurean philosophy is not an ideology and is not addressed to the masses but in the person. As...See More
    Unlike · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 10:56pm

    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa And here is another book by an outstanding scientist who wrote for Epicurus these words : .Image may contain: text

    Unlike · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 10:59pm · Edited

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Elli Pensa Sure but I disagree with your claim about what the suffix ISM means. As I understand it, the English suffix doesn't necessarily refer to an "ideology" but is broader in scope than you're suggesting.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 11:20pm

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Elli Pensa Sure but that doesn't make Epicurean philosophy itself a "science" does it? It would be more accurate to say Epicureans have a philosophy or set of doctrines that has some historical links with science or can potentially be supported with f...See More
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 11:22pm

    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa Donald Robertson Right. The epicurean philosophy is not a science itself. But where I did say that ? I copy paste here of what I commented to you exactly :"You are kindly requested to not call Epicurean Philosophy as Epicurean-ISM. Epicurean philosoph...See More
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 7 at 5:50am

    Cassius Amicus

    Write a reply...

    Matt Jackson

    Matt Jackson I do have a question for Donald, I'm not well read in Stoicism. But I have a pretty strong background in Neoplatonic philosophy. I was wondering how Stoic thought might relate to Neoplatonic concepts of virtue? Is there a commonality or a big difference?


    https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=http%3…dCwLoXlz0RN6rIo
    The Enneads of Plotinus: THE FIRST ENNEAD: SECOND TRACTATE: Section 1
    The Enneads of Plotinus, at sacred-texts.com
    SACRED-TEXTS.COM

    Unlike · Reply · Remove Preview · 3 · March 6 at 2:53pm

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Ok. As I understand it the admins are happy for me to answer these questions here. I'm no expert on Plotinus but it seems to me that his Platonic concept of virtue is more abstract than what the Stoics have in mind. Stoic virtue is knowledge, which consists in applying preconceptions correctly to specific situations in life. I think Plotinus probably means something more like a mystical participation in the Divine. There's bound to be overlap and similarity depending on who you ask and how they interpret the two philosophies, though. On the face of it, Stoic Ethics appears less mystical, but then on closer inspection it does have a sort of mystical quality as well. Virtue is a sort of harmony between the individual and the universe as a whole, or the cosmic Logos, at least from one perspective.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 10:34pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Write a reply...

    Matt Jackson

    Matt Jackson Virtue, like Beauty and other positive qualities are emanations of the One, they bring about a Likeness to the Divine Principle. Is there any commonality of thought in Stoicism? To Plotinus and others like Proclus, the One is the source of the Good in this world. Is there anything in Stoicism that mirrors that? Is there a "God" principle in Stoicism?
    Unlike · Reply · 3 · March 6 at 4:11pm · Edited

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Yes, this isn't as much the focus of Stoic Ethics as it is in Plotinus but the Stoics believed in Zeus, whom they equate with the Logos, and virtue is an imitation of the Mind of Zeus by mortals, and also consists in piety and harmony with the cosmos taken as a whole, which as pantheists (or panentheists) they basically equate with Zeus. (That's not usually the aspect of Stoicism that's at the fore in writers like Seneca or in modern approaches to it, though.)
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 10:37pm

    Matt Jackson

    Matt Jackson Awesome, thank you for the reply. It sounds in some way very similar in some respects to Plotinian thought, though there is some different terminology. What would you equate the Cosmic logos to? Like the Tao? Or the Dharma? Not really a sentient Cosmic Nous?
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 10:41pm

    Matt Jackson

    Matt Jackson The Neoplatonists had the idea that the Nous was a creative element in the Universe, it was an active mind. Is the Logos something similar? Or impersonal like the Tao?
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 10:43pm

    Matt Jackson

    Matt Jackson Getting these answers will really help me "grasp" Stoic thought. So i thank you.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 10:44pm

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Matt Jackson The Stoic Logos is equated with the Mind of Zeus, who is a rational animal that encompasses the whole universe. I don't think I'd describe it as "personal", though, it's a bit more of a philosophers' god than that, although it's probably more pantheistic than Plotinus' philosophy. It's ultimately drawn to a large extent from Heraclitus.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 11:14pm

    Matt Jackson

    Matt Jackson Yes it seems like Zeus or the Logos is a whole that is fragmented into "us." Like a organism with individual parts. So in that way it seems that virtues are derived from human reason not a divine hypostasis.
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 11:32pm

    Matt Jackson

    Matt Jackson Plotinus was far more panentheistic in the sense that the 3 main hypostasis are separate, though immanent in all things. Therefore, the Cosmic Nous is separate from Man, yet man takes part in it.
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 11:34pm

    Matt Jackson

    Matt Jackson Virtue trickles down from the perfection of the One, into the contemplating and creative mind of the Nous down to the Animate Soul. Would it be fair to say in Stoic thought that the "reasoning" aspect is not in a divine Mind but rather in each individual taking part in the greater whole?
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 11:43pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Write a reply...

    Mish Taylor

    Mish Taylor Donald Robertson What improvements to my life can Stoicism bring that the philosophy of Epicurus can't?
    Unlike · Reply · 3 · March 6 at 3:23pm

    Shana HT

    Shana HT to cope with difficulty.. maybe its just a personality thing... but thinking of good and pleasure when im in trouble does nothing for me


    what stoic philosophy does for me, is it makes me mindful of what my hardship is and how i can overcome and surpass it. i feel like practicing it makes me stronger, richer, happier and more confident


    but i have to say, when life isnt so burdensome, some aspects of Epicurian philosophy brings much joy


    i just dont understand this animosity towards stoic philosophy and feel alone in trying to find a way to utilize both philosophies
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 5:19pm

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker You're not alone, Seneca led the way for you. He couldn't reconcile them either. 1f609.png;)
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 5:31pm

    Mish Taylor

    Mish Taylor Shana HT I find it more helpful not to focus on the negative. Things that are beyond your control or influence, will be what they will be. Anything else can usually be overcome with a bit of humour, creative thinking and a bit of support if needed. Whe...See More
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 5:54pm

    Hiram Crespo

    Hiram Crespo Shana HT it seems like you default to Stoicism when you're down and to Epicurus when you're not down. Might it be that you lack Epicurean friends to support you in those times? Friendship is a huge boost to our confidence.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 6:31pm · Edited

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Well one way of answering that question would just be to say that the Stoics offer a wider variety of psychological strategies than the Epicureans, many of which have been assimilated into modern research-based psychotherapy and resilience training, wh...See More
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 10:40pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Donald I understand why Ron said what he said, and the other admins may feel differently, but as far as I am concerned you are a special case and this thread is fine for most anything you want to talk about that is even tangentially related. Your work is well known and as long as we keep it largely within this thread where it doesn't keep popping up as new material I am fine with it. I don't think we want a series of separate posts about stoicism though, as Ron says.
    Like · Reply · 5 · March 6 at 5:01pm

    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa Donald I remind you what was the post of this thread : "Here you will do well to tarry. Here, we are Epicureans, our highest good is PLEASURE and we achieve it through the criteria of truth set forth in the Epicurean Canon. Please tell us clearly and specifically what is your highest good, and how you seek to achieve that goal for your students and in your own life. Thanks"
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 5:05pm

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Okay. See above.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 10:42pm

    Cassius Amicus

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    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson I'm happy to answer questions about Stoicism to the best of my ability in this thread, if both admins are okay with that. Or people can private message me any comments they don't think are appropriate for this group. You might need to wait a few hours for my replies, though. I'm busy working on something else right now, but I'll check back in later. 1f609.png;)
    Unlike · Reply · 3 · March 6 at 5:26pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Minor point but FWIW there are four admins... More importantly, before we get too far afield I know several of us really what to hear you on your commentary on virtue and happiness and the highest good, as several posts have raised.
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 5:38pm

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson I believe that virtue is a form of mental health in that it consists in the good or healthy functioning of our ability to reason about life. I believe that healthy and pleasant feelings follow as a consequence of that, sometimes but not always. So it's more reliable to focus our efforts on the underlying healthy functioning than on the supervening feelings, although when those occur they're like an added bonus. To put it crudely, it's more important to be good than to feel good. Or as modern therapists often put it, there's an important difference between "getting better" and merely "feeling better".
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 10:47pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus "To put it crudely, it's more important to be good than to feel good." Well stated Stoicly - So WHY should we want to be good?
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 6 at 10:48pm · Edited

    Donald Robertson

    Donald Robertson Cassius Amicus Because our moral preconceptions are such that its more consistent for us to view virtue as an end in itself than to view it as a means to an end. So then we'd need to go through various examples to illustrate that, such as the one I mentioned earlier about what we praise in others, and also things like our intuitions about what happens in unusual situations where virtue would not be the most expedient way to achieve pleasure, or where virtue might be strongly valued despite being divorced from the possibility of experiencing pleasure as a consequence, etc.
    Like · Reply · March 6 at 11:17pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus But how do we know what is virtuous in any particular situation?
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 6 at 11:19pm

    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa Cassius Amicus Because you are doing your duty. It is a duty to be virtuous. Experience : once I've heard a parent who was a good stoic saying that in his child that was 17 years old : It was my duty and the fate to bring you in life and paying for all your expenses until now. Thus, you have the duty and the fate to listen, without any objection, to all of my orders what is good and what is bad for you. The results ? A slight depression to all the members of that family. And if you asked that stoic on happiness, he would say to you that all the members of his family, including himself, that were happy. In the question what he would do if any member of his family will be lost and die. He said in fully Apathy that it is the fate and Eimarmeni to be given back to the giver that is Nature who created by the gods. Could someone say that this father of my experience it was not a good stoic, as he kept his principles : Virtue, Duty, Fate and Apathy ? I do not know what the modern stoics claim about for that specific school of philosophy. If they did not keep their principles of their school, and, if they do not keep the teachings of their teachers.... where the heck are they based on ?!
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 7 at 5:10am · Edited

    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa Dimitris Liantinis was a professor of the greek philosophy in the University of Athens. He wrote a book entitled "Stoa and Rome". Here is an excerpt about stoicism :Image may contain: 1 person, standing and text

    Like · Reply · 1 · March 7 at 5:15am

    Cassius Amicus

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    Kris Pliotis HAIRETE KAI YGIAINETE enjoy and be healthy to everybodyLike · Reply · 3 · March 6 at 6:55pm

    Donald Robertson There are so many nested comments now that I may miss some, and the nested threads are growing sometimes several comments at a time, so apologies if I don't reply to something. I've probably just not noticed it.Unlike · Reply · 4 · March 6 at 11:27pm Cassius Amicus Along the lines of that last general comment, it would be a shame if we do not get around to addressing several other issues that Epicurus considered critical, to contrast that with modern Stoicism, such as:1) What role, if any do gods play in human life?2) What happens to the individual consciousness at death?3) Do humans have any control over their affairs (any amount of free will) or is all life predetermined?Epicurus held these to be among the most vexing questions of life, and gave answers to them. Does modern Stoicism? If so, what are those answers? It is relatively easy to come up with answers from the classical stoics to most of these questions, but less so when I read the modern stoics.Like · Reply · 4 · March 6 at 11:40pm · Edited Cassius Amicus Unfortunately I am going to be away from the computer for much of the day. In the meantime, to supplement the three topics I just mentioned (1-gods, 2-death, 3-free will) I also suggest that it will help to get to the heart of the matter if we consider not the stated reason, but the process by which Stoics conclude that they can justify holding virtue to be its own reward. Recall that Lucretius labeled Heraclitus as a muddy thinker who sought to impress with the obscurity of this thinking, When someone suggests that there is nous, or divine fire, or Zeus, or that there is some standard of excellence that we "just know" to be true, what is their process for determining that these things exist?The further out there and the more abstract and obscure the "reasoning" becomes, the more we should realize that it is divorced from commonly and easily available evidence of the senses to validate. And not only to validate - the assertion that there are supernatural gods, or idealistic standards of excellence contradicts other conclusions that ARE validated by the senses - first and foremost that nothing comes from nothing and nothing goes to nothing, at the whim of any god or for any other reason. And when we also validate through observation-based reasoning that the universe is composed of atoms and void in motion, and of that only, then all these theories about eternal absolutes and standards of excellence are seen to be impossible, and we are able to see that indeed only the faculties of pleasure and pain are given by nature for determining what is desirable and what is painful.I think this leads us to see clearly why it was so important that Epicurus did not hold "logic" or "reason" to be separate faculties and co-equal with the three categories of his canon of truth. Logic and reason have no separate and real existence any more than does nous or Zeus - logic and reason are simply names we give to mental processes that may or may not be consistent with the evidence provided by the three canonical faculties. Logic and reason cannot create evidence from nothing any more than atoms can be created from nothing, nor should they be allowed to contradict conclusions that ARE clearly supported by real evidence. But humans have free will, and the ability to imagine all sorts of things that are unsupported and contradicted by reality.So every assertion that there is a standard of excellence or virtue aside from the natural response of pleasure and pain has to be met with "What is the evidence for that proposition?" And when a stoic says that 'we just know" what excellence is, your personal sense of pain or pleasure may agree with that stoic's conclusion in a particular situation, and you may be tempted to think that the stoic might be on to something. But if you accept the stoic's contention that there is some other process besides the natural faculty of pain and pleasure which validates that conclusion, then you have accepted that it is valid to make an ethical assertion based on nothing but opinion. And when the stoic takes his next logical step, asserting that there is only one true virtue and one true excellence to which you should conform your life, you will find your confidence in the correctness of your own vision of happiness will be drained to nothing. Then like, Marcus Aurelius and stoic opinion leaders of today. as you find yourself watching your world disintegrate around you, rather than confronting hard realities and working to fix the problem, you will decide to "manage your emotions," "keep calm," "worry only about things that are under your control" and drift off into a never-never land where everyone "just gets along" and one mans' fantasy is as good as another's.Like · Reply · 4 · March 7 at 8:12am · Edited Donald Robertson I'll add a few more specific examples of the sort of arguments mentioned above. 1. Suppose some person attains a perfect state of pleasure. (I'll leave it for others to define, as it seems to me there's some disagreement among modern Epicureans about exactly how this should be defined, but that probably doesn't matter.) Compare that to another person who exhibits exceptional moral wisdom and courage. Let's suppose that (likely or not) they appear quite different in other regards: so the pleasure exemplar isn't known for virtue and the virtue exemplar isn't known for "pleasure". Does history not show that the majority of people tend to find the second type of person more admirable and praiseworthy? Is it not the case that those qualities better meet our preconception of what's supremely good in life? (Some people will undoubtedly disagree but I think most would agree with the above.) Suppose, for the sake of argument, that an Epicurean said that on reflection, he probably did find wisdom and courage, in themselves, more admirable than pleasure/contentment, or whatever. If his doctrine is that pleasure is the supreme good, that would appear to highlight a contradiction between his implicit moral values and his professed philosophy. That's the type of reductio argument, I would expect a Stoic to use with an individual Epicurean. (Again, there will be some individuals who simply reject the premises, but that's okay.) Someone else might admit they admire wisdom and courage (virtue) more than "pleasure" in other people, on reflection, but deny that's a problematic sort of contradiction. They might say they're happy admiring qualities in other people more than they desire them for themselves. The Stoics, though, would challenge that as hypocrisy and argue that we all should (and at some level do) desire to be consistent in our thinking, especially about such important matters as our moral values. I think they'd want to argue that there is a problem if we try to separate what we value most about the character of other people from what we value most for ourselves. They see that sort of conflict in our values as a sort of alienation from the rest of mankind. If what I actually admire most about other people is their wisdom and moral integrity then that sort of thing should be my priority for myself as well. On the other hand, if what I admire most about them is how pleasantly contented their life is, then that should probably be my own number one goal in life too. There aren't very many figures in history whom people admire for being like Epicurus in that respect, though. There are obviously many more examples of historical figures who are admired for what we call virtue, or strength of character. Now that's not intended as a proof, merely an illustration. The individual would need to reflect on their own moral preconceptions and determine whether they're being applied consistently or not, maybe by looking at the range of figures they most admire in life themselves (not merely the ones the rest of society admires).Like · Reply · 1 · March 7 at 5:50pm · Edited Cassius Amicus A good and clear statement of your position - thank you.Like · Reply · 1 · March 7 at 5:54pm Write a reply... Donald Robertson 2. Suppose someone is about to die in a moment (or just strongly believes that they are). They have a few seconds to make a decision about some important moral action. For instance, in the heat of battle they have the opportunity to give their life to save their comrades. For the sake of argument, lets suppose there's no possibility they're going to have an opportunity to actually notice any sensation of pleasure following this virtuous action. (This example is borrowed from Seneca, incidentally.) Would an Epicurean, based on his doctrines, choose to act "virtuously" in the conventional sense, by saving his comrades, despite the fact there's no opportunity for the consequent enjoyment of pleasure or contentment (or whatever)? The Stoics argue that many people's moral preconceptions would be that the right thing is to act courageously for the welfare of one's loved ones so a doctrine that potentially leads us to believe there's no point in doing so unless it contributes to a pleasant life, would leave them in a state of contradiction. Again, for some individuals, that would constitute a reductio ad absurdum. So I imagine some Epicureans might respond by arguing that they do still have a motive, based on Epicurean doctrine, for self-sacrifice in this case, but I've never seen a very clear articulation of that argument. So how would that actually work? On the other hand, I've known at least one modern Epicurean who took the opposite line and said he accepted that his doctrines would provide him with no motive for self-sacrifice in this scenario and that he found that morally acceptable. That's also fine, in a sense, although I think other people are more likely to see that as a kind of extreme morality and to struggle a bit more with the apparent contradiction there.Like · Reply · 1 · March 7 at 5:50pm · Edited Mish Taylor Point 1/ Imagine, if you were a person who was wise, courageous & content, what a pleasure that would be! To top it all, you did not put A Nother on a pedestal to be admired or to measure yourself by.Like · Reply · March 7 at 5:43pm Donald Robertson 3. An example from Cicero, also mentioned by Epictetus. Suppose that an Epicurean sees someone they have reason to view as an enemy about to sit on a woodpile with a poisonous snake. They could easily say nothing, and nobody would ever know that they'd seen the snake and could have warned him. Or they could let him sit on it, be bitten, and die. Again, I've met Epicureans who said they'd be happy to do the latter. On the other hand, for many people that will conflict with their moral preconceptions. They'd think it's wrong. So the question for them would be why, as an Epicurean, should they avoid doing it, if there are no negative consequences for their own pleasure/contentment? One way around this would be to argue, as some ancient Epicureans did, that we're bound to be troubled by our conscience. However, that's a weak argument because we know now that "conscience" varies tremendously and many people have a negligible sense of distress in relation to things others consider unethical. (The extreme cases would be sociopaths, but many other people lack this sort of feeling or have it only to a slight degree, whereas other personality types are tortured by guilt over slight moral transgressions.) Again, this would constitute a reductio for some individuals, if they couldn't reconcile the argument that virtue is of value only as a means to "pleasure" with their moral intuition that allowing someone to die is wrong.Like · Reply · 1 · March 7 at 5:51pm · Edited Elli Pensa Donald Robertson a friendly suggestion : If you want your text to be read by others, please put some enter/or paragraphs along the lines. It is very tiring to the eyes. ThanksLike · Reply · March 7 at 5:48pm Alexander Rios I believe that all of Donald's challenges listed above are handled in: Torquatus' Defense of Epicurus, plus the Epicurean Inscription of Diogenes of Oenoanda.Like · Reply · 2 · March 7 at 5:55pm · Edited Donald Robertson 4. Another thought-experiment that other schools used to question Epicurean ethics... Suppose you lived in a world populated by other Epicureans. Would that really be preferable to living in a world full of Platonists, Aristotelians, or Stoics? Would you, e.g., want other people to view your friendship as of value merely insofar as it contributes to their own "pleasure", in the Epicurean sense? (Some modern Epicureans dispute this claim about the instrumentality of friendship, whereas others strongly endorse it, as far as I can tell.) I've heard some people say, e.g., that what appeals to them most is being Epicurean, but for everyone else to be Stoic, i.e., to be virtuous toward them for its own sake. Again, that would arguably form the basis of another reductio. Although, as noted above, some people might say they're happy to accept that apparent contradiction, I think many others find it more troubling, on reflection.Unlike · Reply · 1 · March 7 at 5:55pm · Edited Alexander Rios Unlike · Reply · 3 · March 7 at 5:58pm Alexander Rios Unlike · Reply · 3 · March 7 at 6:00pm Alexander Rios I wish I lived in a world full of Epicureans.I'd rather put my life in the hands of my Epicurean friends, than any other people I have known in my entire life.Unlike · Reply · 2 · March 7 at 6:15pm Write a reply... Cassius Amicus All four of these are well stated Donald. Thank you again! Nothing advances the ball like a clear statement of a position to which a clear response can be given. if you have more, please be sure to add them!Like · Reply · March 7 at 5:56pm Donald Robertson 5. The following thought-experiment was actually suggested to me by an Epicurean friend... What if there was a machine which could provide you with perfect pleasure. (Modern Epicureans seem to define "pleasure" in several different ways but just insert your definition here.) But it meant spending your life as a brain in a vat, i.e., in a way that many people's conventional moral intuitions would find troubling. Let's suppose there's no risk attached to this procedure -- it's pretty much guaranteed. Some Epicureans have told me that's fine and their doctrines would lead them to accept the procedure, and become a brain in a pleasure vat. I think other Epicureans would feel a conflict, once again, though. You could optionally add another criterion (version 2, let's call it) and make it that the procedure will half your IQ and reduce you to stupidity and a dreamlike state, but one in which you'll feel pleasure and contentment but lose all wisdom and intelligence. Some people may say that pleasure would only be worthwhile insofar as it's accompanied by something like wisdom or intelligence. Seneca points out that would mean pleasure is no longer the supreme good, though, but wisdom has supplanted it as more important, or at least a composite of them has become the supreme good. As Seneca points out, the Stoics value wisdom as the supreme good, upon which they claim joy and happiness are likely to supervene. So if that's what you want, that's actually more akin to the Stoic definition of the goal of life. Whereas the Epicureans, by contrast, generally appear to make wisdom of subordinate value to pleasure.Like · Reply · March 7 at 6:09pm · Edited Mish Taylor Donald, I find your comments quite assumptive, regarding the stance of Epicureans, the arguments are the same old, same old, again quoting Epictetus and now the ridiculous point 5. Wisdom is also a pleasure!Like · Reply · 1 · March 7 at 6:07pm Cassius Amicus Donald are you finished? Please be sure to give us all you have, and then in order to make this manageable I think we should probably break this down into separate posts for each point.Like · Reply · March 7 at 6:07pm Cassius Amicus It might be logical to place a temporary hold on posts after you finish Donald, let me break them down into separate posts, and then unfreeze the thread (???)Like · Reply · 2 · March 7 at 6:08pm Cassius Amicus Some people may post responses before I get these reorganized, or later on, but still each one deserves MUCH discussion, so I don't think Facebook will handle this without separating them. Please let me know when you are finished......Like · Reply · 2 · March 7 at 6:10pm Cassius Amicus I am here and available to split these up as soon as you are finished Donald RobertsonLike · Reply · March 7 at 6:11pm Donald Robertson Sure, I can add another few arguments which are familiar from the Stoic literature and maybe Cicero, and try to phrase them in more modern language. I think these are the sort of arguments that ancient Epicureans obviously faced and their attempts to answer them quite probably shaped the evolution of their philosophy in some respects. (Just as the attempts to answer criticisms from Academic Skeptics and Epicureans apparently shaped the evolution of Stoicism.) So I think this is pretty much the sort of philosophy we should all be doing - considering these sort of thought experiments. Even if, as Epicureans, you reject them all, doing so will help many (if not all) of you sharpen your definitions and arguments and clarify your thinking about Epicurean ethics. We don't learn much just by talking to people who agree with us, but by trying to answer the common criticisms raised against our doctrines, I believe. That's why I think it's good, and very healthy, for Stoics and Epicureans to talk to one another.Unlike · Reply · 2 · March 7 at 6:13pm Cassius Amicus Absolutely. Do you expect to finish soon or how much time do you need? I may start splitting now but it might be better to do them all at once when you finishLike · Reply · March 7 at 6:14pm Donald Robertson Well, it could go on, but let's say another half hour or so to give me time to look over some notes.Like · Reply · March 7 at 6:15pm Cassius Amicus Ok I will wait and repost them all at once so they appear together in the timelineLike · Reply · March 7 at 6:16pm · Edited Write a reply... Cassius Amicus If anyone posts comments/responses in the meantime I don't see any problems with that. I will try to move at least some of them into the thread of the new post after it is set up (but it won't be movable except as a rough cut and paste)Like · Reply · March 7 at 6:19pm · Edited Cassius Amicus Unless I hear from Donald Robertson otherwise I will wait about 30 minutes from his post above (which currently says it is 11 minutes old ... Sure, I can add another few arguments which are familiar from the Stoic literature and maybe Cicero, and try to phrase them in more modern language. ...) and then start repostingLike · Reply · March 7 at 6:25pm Donald Robertson 6. From Epictetus... Epicureans believe that pleasure is the highest good. (Again, some people have actually disputed this but I think it's safe to say most Epicureans will go along with that claim, with the usual caveats.) However, most (if not all) pleasures have "intensionality", meaning that they are "about" something, the thing we take pleasure in. In other words, rather than just going around having free-floating pleasures, we're usually enjoying music, or the company of friends, or admiring some idea, or something. If we take pleasure in something, does it not seem (to many people if not all) that it makes more sense to say the thing being enjoyed is good rather than the feeling of enjoyment? When we take pleasure in something, isn't it often because we're judging it to be good at some level? (For Stoics, joy and pleasure, the passions not sensations, are defined as the belief that something good is present, or being experienced by us.) We actually have a transcription of Epictetus employing this as a reductio with an Epicurean who visited his school, incidentally. (Some people might claim it's a fabrication, which is fair enough, although there's nothing to indicate that.) If we take pleasure in something bad, are we willing to say that the pleasure is still good? For example, is pleasure taken in torturing small children still good? Or would we need to qualify it and say that pleasure is only good if its object is also good? That seems to introduce a much stronger caveat than is implied in the Epicurean definition of pleasure as the highest good, though. Moreover, pleasure can be good or bad depending on whether its object is good or bad, that implies it's actually morally neutral, or "indifferent", as the Stoics put it. Pleasure in itself is neither good nor bad. Pleasure in bad things, like harming people for fun, is bad; pleasure in good things, like helping loved ones, is good. However, that seems to suggest that it's really the object that is good or bad, in itself, and the feeling of pleasure is only good or bad decoratively, i.e., its actually indifferent in itself. Some people will disagree with those intuitions but for those who accept them, like the Epicurean in the Discourses, it seems to create a contradiction between their professed doctrines and the implications of their moral preconceptions, on reflection.Like · Reply · March 7 at 6:27pm · Edited Donald Robertson 7. Both Seneca and Epictetus argue that Epicurean philosophy encouraged its followers to view all friendships as fair-weather friendships, i.e., to value others only for their utility and not for their own sake, as means and not as ends in themselves. Again, it seems to me that some modern Epicureans actually agree that Epicurus taught this and are happy with it, whereas others dispute this interpretation of his teachings. "These are the so-called “fair-weather” friendships; one who is chosen for the sake of utility will be satisfactory only so long as he is useful. […] He who begins to be your friend because it pays will also cease because it pays." (Seneca). Again, reversing perspectives becomes problematic if we read Epicurus this way: you might want to view other people merely as a means to the end of "pleasure", or whatever, but would you want them to view you that way? This is also closely-related to the argument that it's problematic to imagine a whole state or a whole world of people following Epicurean philosophy, rather than an individual or a small community. Suppose you don't want other people to treat you merely as a fairweather friend, and to potentially abandon you as soon as they calculate that would be in their interest, in terms of pleasure. How do you reconcile that with the doctrine that friends are only of instrumental value? (Or do you reject that interpretation of Epicurus -- if so, what do you make of other Epicureans who do interpret the philosophy that way?)Like · Reply · March 7 at 6:35pm · Edited Donald Robertson 8. Seneca and others also object to the Epicurean doctrine that makes virtue of value only instrumentally, as a means to attaining pleasure, as follows. (Again, some modern Epicureans may dispute this interpretation of Epicurus, although others tell me they accept it and agree with it as a philosophy of life.) Someone who acts bravely for the sake of a reward, arguably isn't really brave at all. (Again, some people will accept this particular moral intuition, others will not.) To endure danger for money isn't real bravery, it's just greed. And the same would apply to rewards such as pleasure: acting bravely to win some reward as a consequence isn't really what we mean by bravery, on reflection. The same would apply to the virtue of temperance. Not snacking on chips for a week because someone's offered me a million dollars to do so, wouldn't, on the face of it, constitute praiseworthy (virtuous) self-mastery. It's the ability to control our desires in the *absence* of a strong reward for doing so that's actually required for the virtue of temperance. What about justice, kindness, and fairness? If I'm only treating other people kindly and fairly because I believe I'm going to gain some reward for so doing then arguably that's not really the virtue of justice at all. Doesn't the same apply if I see justice as indifferent in itself, and only of value as a means to obtaining "pleasure" (in the Epicurean sense)? So the Stoics, and others, argue that our preconceptions about virtue separate it from people acting in similar ways for personal gain, or pleasure. Someone who wants to preserve that conception of virtue but also professes to follow the Epicurean doctrine is arguably going to have to reconcile those two things somehow or accept that they're in contradiction.Like · Reply · March 7 at 6:48pm · Edited Donald Robertson Here's a review of similar arguments in Seneca, if that's any help, including more quotations from Epicurus and references to his teachings than I could include above:http://donaldrobertson.name/what-seneca-really-said.../ What Seneca Really Said about EpicureanismDONALDROBERTSON.NAME Like · Reply · Remove Preview · March 7 at 6:49pm Donald Robertson Likewise, here's a review of Epictetus' comments about Epicurus, including quotes (allegedly) from Epicurus' writings and a transcription of a dialogue with an Epicurean philosopher who visited his school:http://donaldrobertson.name/epictetus-stoicism-versus.../ Epictetus: Stoicism versus EpicureanismArticle outlining the criticisms of Epicureanism made by the Stoic Epictetus.DONALDROBERTSON.NAME Like · Reply · Remove Preview · March 7 at 6:50pm Cassius Amicus I will keep those last two separate but thanks very much for adding them. Do you think you are finished for the moment after posting eight questions? Of course if you come up with others of similar nature in the future we can do them too.Like · Reply · March 7 at 6:51pm · Edited Donald Robertson Sure, yes, I think that's enough for now. Thanks.Like · Reply · March 7 at 7:14pm Write a reply... Matt Jackson Hi Donald, I'm interested to know more about the Stoic cosmology and theology and how it relates to Virtue. From what I've gathered there is a "pantheistic reasoning God" called Zeus that fills the role of a Divine Principle. It appears that this being is "fragmented" among the various minds in the universe. It also appears that this being is not a separate entity like a Divine Mind or Nous, but rather a holistic "whole" of separate reasoning minds. It is from these individual reasoning minds that Virtue is conceived. I'm wondering though, is it safe to call this passive being a God? Since the "being" has no external reasoning capability outside of the individual minds that are it's many parts. Objectively, it would appear that it is not a God at all but rather a poetic description of the multiplicity of Nature, and not in any way actually Divine. This would become somewhat problematic for virtue's sake since relativism is rampant among the varied minds in the world (which can readily be seen everywhere). If this God is not autonomous that means he is actually bound to the will of individual reasoning minds. Thus we have varied interpretations of what virtue might be across various individuals and cultures.It is clear that this theological idea is very important because it relates DIRECTLY to Stoic virtue. In fact, I'm not sure how to proceed any further with a discussion of virtue without clarifying this point. Is this Zeus/God really a "passive" being subject to the contemplation of man? Or do we say that it is actually autonomous and "it" contemplates a standard of Virtue and is a judge? It seems this theological concept is the genesis of Stoic Virtue.Unlike · Reply · 2 · March 7 at 9:34pm Write a comment...

  • Stoic Challenges to Epicurean Philosophy - 4 - Wouldn't It Be Better to Live in A World of Stoics Or Platonists Rather than a World of Epicureans?

    • Cassius
    • March 11, 2017 at 4:15 PM
    Cassius Amicus

    March 7 at 7:05pm

    **Stoic Challenges To Epicurean Philosophy** (4) Another thought-experiment that other schools used to question Epicurean ethics... Suppose you lived in a world populated by other Epicureans. Would that really be preferable to living in a world full of Platonists, Aristotelians, or Stoics? Would you, e.g., want other people to view your friendship as of value merely insofar as it contributes to their own "pleasure", in the Epicurean sense? (Some modern Epicureans dispute this claim about the instrumentality of friendship, whereas others strongly endorse it, as far as I can tell.)

    I've heard some people say, e.g., that what appeals to them most is being Epicurean, but for everyone else to be Stoic, i.e., to be virtuous toward them for its own sake. Again, that would arguably form the basis of another reductio. Although, as noted above, some people might say they're happy to accept that apparent contradiction, I think many others find it more troubling, on reflection.

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    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus If the essence of this question is "Would you want to live in a world full of Epicureans/Stoics/Platonists/Aristotelians?" then we're back to the same questions of identifying the goals of these philosophies and deciding whether those goals are valid. As an Epicurean and a proponent of modern science, I see no evidence of (1) gods/divine fire anywhere or (2) ideal forms in another world or (3) essences in this world. And so I reject as totally unfounded the ethics of Stoics, Platonists, and Aristotelians.


    On the other hand, I find the strongest possible personal evidence of my ability to experience pleasure and pain, and find it very practical to consider justice and other conceptual abstractions to be desirable insofar as they advance the happiness of myself and my friends, and undesirable insofar as they lead to my/our pain. And likewise, because there are no enforcing gods or ideals or essences to control other people, and because I find that frequently those who are most religious are most vile, I would much prefer to live in a world where everyone recognized reality, and knew that if they attacked me then me and my friends would defend ourselves, just as those others would protect themselves if I or my friends were to choose to attack them. So my totally predictable answer is that I would prefer to live in an Epicurean world, and for anyone to whom I am well disposed I would also wish the same opportunity.
    Like · Reply · 3 · March 7 at 9:50pm

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey Do we not already live in a world that is closer to Epicureanism than the others? Enlightened self interest is pretty much the dominant ethos. No?
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 8 at 7:05am

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus I would definitely say 'No" Jimmy. Even use of the word "enlightened" seems to acknowledge that the dominant morality of the world is that we should be "good" people. And thinking of the goal of life as "being a good person" is essentially a common-language way of saying "be a virtuous person" which is he approach of Socrates, Aristotle, Plato, Zeno, and the non-Epicurean mainstream. And that doesn't even address the huge numbers (maybe the absolute majority) who just want to "do god's will." Of course these distinctions will be lost on people who think that "living virtuously" is essentially the same goal as "living happily" - as we see many argue even in these exchanges in this group.
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 8 at 7:15am · Edited

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey Hmm, I'm in the UK and i can see little evidence of people valuing the virtuous. The US is more religious (I only know one practising Christian). Here it is material succes. Not that this is Epicurean, but closer to Epicureanism in terms of personal pleasure than the more po faced self denial of the Stoics.
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · March 8 at 7:55am

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus I certainly grant you would know the UK better than I do if you life there. But if we look at it in terms of what people say is admirable, rather than what they actually do, do they not still praise "goodness" as the highest type of person?
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 8 at 8:57am

    Hiram Crespo

    Hiram Crespo The argument re: instrumentality actually started with the Cyranaics, with the mysanthropic Hegesias arguing that people are instrumental, and later Anniceris arguing that they are not. It is my view that Anniceris' philosophy is are the main chain that links the Cyrenaics to the Epicureans by the way he reacted against Hegesias and argued in favor of a philosophy of friendship. https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=https%…isZ6MidSGr3n9Ts

    Cyrenaic Reasonings II: Hegesias and Anniceris
    THEAUTARKIST.WORDPRESS.COM

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    Hiram Crespo

    Hiram Crespo Also, I want to address what seems like an underlying insinuation of many enemies of Epicurus: the belief that an Epicurean, because he seeks pleasure, can not be a good citizen or a model citizen. This essay by John Thrasher argues that Epicurean contractarianism, in seeking mutual advantage, can serve as a conciliatory process between citizens and that it has historically not gotten the credit it deserves.https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=http%3…PMPjhCc6Fa8YjAM
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    Hiram Crespo

    Hiram Crespo Now on to answer the question: would it be preferable to live in a world full of Epicureans? I would not want to rid the world of people who think differently: this is what makes philosophy interesting, but I think a world full of Epicureans (as per PD 39) would be a world where people associate with kindred spirits primarily, attempt to have good relations with everyone, and avoid conflict with anyone else.

    I think it would also be a world where conflict resolution would take the form of covenants of non-harm and of mutual advantage. I also think there would be scientific advancement, low levels of superstition to none, and a lot of comedy and merry.

    I certainly think this would be a better world than one full of Platonists because in Plato's Republic, the state would steal our children to raise them, and engage in eugenics, there would be no personal freedom, and it would be an insufferable tyranny.

    As for a world full of Stoics or Aristotelians, I do not know how to imagine such worlds. Maybe if others give me a clearer idea of what they would look like, that would help comparison.
    Like · Reply · 3 · March 8 at 10:31am

    Cassius Amicus

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  • Stoic Challenges To Epicurean Philosophy - 5 - Would An Epicurean Accept The "Brain In A Vat Producing Perfect Pleasure" Hypothetical?

    • Cassius
    • March 11, 2017 at 4:13 PM
    Cassius Amicus

    March 7 at 7:05pm

    **Stoic Challenges To Epicurean Philosophy** (5) The following thought-experiment was actually suggested to me by an Epicurean friend... What if there was a machine which could provide you with perfect pleasure. (Modern Epicureans seem to define "pleasure" in several different ways but just insert your definition here.) But it meant spending your life as a brain in a vat, i.e., in a way that many people's conventional moral intuitions would find troubling. Let's suppose there's no risk attached to this procedure -- it's pretty much guaranteed. Some Epicureans have told me that's fine and their doctrines would lead them to accept the procedure, and become a brain in a pleasure vat. I think other Epicureans would feel a conflict, once again, though.

    You could optionally add another criterion (version 2, let's call it) and make it that the procedure will half your IQ and reduce you to stupidity and a dreamlike state, but one in which you'll feel pleasure and contentment but lose all wisdom and intelligence.
    Some people may say that pleasure would only be worthwhile insofar as it's accompanied by something like wisdom or intelligence. Seneca points out that would mean pleasure is no longer the supreme good, though, but wisdom has supplanted it as more important, or at least a composite of them has become the supreme good. As Seneca points out, the Stoics value wisdom as the supreme good, upon which they claim joy and happiness are likely to supervene. So if that's what you want, that's actually more akin to the Stoic definition of the goal of life. Whereas the Epicureans, by contrast, generally appear to make wisdom of subordinate value to pleasure.

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    Michael Carteron

    Michael Carteron Epicureans say it is impossible to live pleasantly without living wisely. Again, how much does he know of the philosophy?
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 7 at 7:54pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus (1) Hypotheticals which are based on non-nonsensical physics are generally non-starters. Epicurean ethics are based on the physics of the real world and of real human beings. If we want to talk about ethics in a fantasy world then some might find that to be an interesting game, but the main use of that game for practical people is to illustrate why it is important to stay grounded in the facts of reality lest you waste your time on false dreams.
    Like · Reply · 3 · March 7 at 9:29pm · Edited

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker Thought experiments...


    I'm going to go join the Stoic group and post Trolley Memes all day long. 1f603.png:D


    Hypotheticals have very poor predictive ability in judging future decision making processes or current values particularly when there are systematic biases built into them. This has shown to be true over and over again in the neurosciences.

    https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=http%3…zNKIfDo5ddu3-nU

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    We care about science, right?
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · March 7 at 11:30pm

    Hiram Crespo

    Hiram Crespo Polystratus said that when people pursue virtue without the study of nature, their virtue comes to nothing (they either become superstitious or arrogant). The same might be said of pleasure, if we consider PD 5. We've talked here in the past about how Epicurean philosophy is meant to reconcile us with nature (and with reality), to help us keep our feet on the ground, and of how Epicurean philosophy is an attempt to be both authentic (no need to deny science and nature) and happy. Not sure how a pleasure machine would comply with that, since it produces "Platonic" or imaginary pleasure.

    There's nothing wrong with imagining things, as an exercise maybe. But to replace reality in this manner is neurosis.

    But let's give this a try. If we take this hypothesis more or less into the real world, maybe we can consider the stupor of drug use. If a person tries to operate in a constant state of stupor as a result of drug use, he may lose his reputation and his job, and be unable to meet his most important natural and necessary desires. He may also harm his relations. There are also potential legal disadvantages if the drugs he uses are illegal.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 8 at 11:17am · Edited

  • Stoic Challenges to Epicurean Philosophy - 3 - Epicureans Are Not Good People Because They Would Not Warn Enemies Against Hidden Hazards

    • Cassius
    • March 11, 2017 at 4:11 PM
    Cassius Amicus

    March 7 at 7:04pm

    **Stoic Challenges To Epicurean Philosophy** (3) An example from Cicero, also mentioned by Epictetus. Suppose that an Epicurean sees someone they have reason to view as an enemy about to sit on a woodpile with a poisonous snake. They could easily say nothing, and nobody would ever know that they'd seen the snake and could have warned him. Or they could let him sit on it, be bitten, and die. Again, I've met Epicureans who said they'd be happy to do the latter. On the other hand, for many people that will conflict with their moral preconceptions. They'd think it's wrong. So the question for them would be why, as an Epicurean, should they avoid doing it, if there are no negative consequences for their own pleasure/contentment?

    One way around this would be to argue, as some ancient Epicureans did, that we're bound to be troubled by our conscience. However, that's a weak argument because we know now that "conscience" varies tremendously and many people have a negligible sense of distress in relation to things others consider unethical. (The extreme cases would be sociopaths, but many other people lack this sort of feeling or have it only to a slight degree, whereas other personality types are tortured by guilt over slight moral transgressions.) Again, this would constitute a reductio for some individuals, if they couldn't reconcile the argument that virtue is of value only as a means to "pleasure" with their moral intuition that allowing someone to die is wrong.

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    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus (1) "we know now that "conscience" varies tremendously and many people have a negligible sense of distress in relation to things others consider unethical." Does this observation not gut the entire stoic construct that proper morality is an innate gift of the gods/divine fire?
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 7 at 9:51pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus (2) Another major issue I have with this question is the very dialectical / idealist throwing around of words like "enemy." Is this person my mortal enemy who has sworn to kill every last member of my house? Then of course, snake, do your job! Is this person someone who I met when I was a child and pulled my hair and I have never liked for twenty years because he made me mad then, even though we are very similar in many ways? Then of course if I were fully evaluating the context and the future pain / pleasure calculation for me, I would choose to tell him about the snake and reap the reward of potentially converting an enemy to a friend. But the huge spectrum of issues that are involved in any actual situation make it impossible to derive a "one size fits all" answer to any question about what one does with an "enemy" (or a "friend," for that matter) in any particular situation.
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 7 at 9:57pm

    Hiram Crespo

    Hiram Crespo I do not think this question applies ONLY to Epicureans. Catholic priests have gotten away with predatory behavior for generations, thinking they would not be found. And they are VERY un-Epicurean, their religion is more a cult of suffering than of pleasure.

    Also, sociopaths and narcissists tend to make it very difficult to relate to and associate with, and most of us tend to stay away from people (As per PD 39) who exhibit these dysfunctions, who betray friends, etc.
    Unlike · Reply · 3 · March 8 at 11:35am

  • Stoic Challenges To Epicurean Philosophy - 7 - Are Not Epicureans Only Fair-Weather Friends?

    • Cassius
    • March 11, 2017 at 4:10 PM
    Cassius Amicus

    March 7 at 7:07pm

    **Stoic Challenges To Epicurean Philosophy** (7) Both Seneca and Epictetus argue that Epicurean philosophy encouraged its followers to view all friendships as fair-weather friendships, i.e., to value others only for their utility and not for their own sake, as means and not as ends in themselves. Again, it seems to me that some modern Epicureans actually agree that Epicurus taught this and are happy with it, whereas others dispute this interpretation of his teachings. "These are the so-called “fair-weather” friendships; one who is chosen for the sake of utility will be satisfactory only so long as he is useful. […] He who begins to be your friend because it pays will also cease because it pays." (Seneca). Again, reversing perspectives becomes problematic if we read Epicurus this way: you might want to view other people merely as a means to the end of "pleasure", or whatever, but would you want them to view you that way?

    This is also closely-related to the argument that it's problematic to imagine a whole state or a whole world of people following Epicurean philosophy, rather than an individual or a small community. Suppose you don't want other people to treat you merely as a fairweather friend, and to potentially abandon you as soon as they calculate that would be in their interest, in terms of pleasure. How do you reconcile that with the doctrine that friends are only of instrumental value? (Or do you reject that interpretation of Epicurus -- if so, what do you make of other Epicureans who do interpret the philosophy that way?)

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    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios If we want to understand Epicurean friendship we should consult with Epicureans. Neither Seneca nor Epictetus were Epicureans. Here is an Epicurean's presentation on Friendship.Image may contain: text

    Unlike · Reply · 3 · March 7 at 9:34pm · Edited

    Alexander Rios

    Alexander RiosImage may contain: text

    Unlike · Reply · 2 · March 7 at 7:26pm

    Michael Carteron

    Michael Carteron Epicurus praises friendship more highly than any person who I've ever read. The view doesn't seem to be "if the going gets tough, then abandon your friends"-much the opposite. Rather, that having friends will help you to endure the hard times (along with being a good thing in general). This necessarily would involve helping friends out.
    Unlike · Reply · 4 · March 7 at 7:49pm · Edited

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus The answers already given are very good. At this point the only thing I can think to add is that here, once again, the implication is being given that pleasure is limited to some spur of the moment physical stimulation. But mental pleasure is every bit as significant as bodily pleasure, and actually more intense. The pleasure that comes from a close friendship (as opposed to superficial fairweather relationships) is among the deepest in existence, and the pain of such losses is among the worst pains. There are no consistency issues here.


    "But although men do experience mental pleasure that is agreeable and mental pain that is annoying, yet both of these we assert arise out of and are based upon bodily sensations. Regardless of this, we maintain that this does not preclude mental pleasures and pains from being much more intense than those of the body; since the body can feel only what is present to it at the moment, whereas the mind is also cognizant of the past and of the future. For, even granting that pain of body is equally painful, yet our sensation of pain can be enormously increased by the belief that some evil of unlimited magnitude and duration threatens to befall us hereafter. And the same consideration may be transferred to pleasure -- a pleasure is greater if not accompanied by any apprehension of evil. It therefore clearly appears that intense mental pleasure or distress contributes more to our happiness or misery than a bodily pleasure or pain of equal duration."
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 7 at 9:38pm

    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios All good and evil come to us by sensation. By sight, sound, smell, taste, touch and other senses. The wise man uses the present sensations and the memory of past (sensory) events prudently.Image may contain: text

    Unlike · Reply · 2 · March 7 at 9:50pm

    Hiram Crespo

    Hiram Crespo Friends are long-term means to a life of pleasure. But they are by far the most important one, and Epicurus said that sometimes a wise man will give his life for his friends. This means that he will love his friends so much that, for their sake, he will consider that it would not be worth living if he didn't have them and if he seriously was in danger of losing them.

    27. Of all the means which wisdom acquires to ensure happiness throughout the whole of life, by far the most important is friendship.

    So, would I mind being seen as a means to the happiness of my friends, if those friends are the kind that would give their lives for me, and I for them, if needed? No. I would not mind. Friendship is an essential Epicurean value.

    The problem of "Fair weather friends" and flatterers and other false friends is addressed in Philodemus' Peri Parrhesias.
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 8 at 12:02pm

  • Stoic Challenges To Epicurean Philosophy - 2 - Why Would An Epicurean Die For A Friend?

    • Cassius
    • March 11, 2017 at 4:08 PM
    Cassius Amicus

    March 7 at 7:03pm

    **Stoic Challenges To Epicurean Philosophy** (2): Suppose someone is about to die in a moment (or just strongly believes that they are). They have a few seconds to make a decision about some important moral action. For instance, in the heat of battle they have the opportunity to give their life to save their comrades. For the sake of argument, lets suppose there's no possibility they're going to have an opportunity to actually notice any sensation of pleasure following this virtuous action. (This example is borrowed from Seneca, incidentally.) Would an Epicurean, based on his doctrines, choose to act "virtuously" in the conventional sense, by saving his comrades, despite the fact there's no opportunity for the consequent enjoyment of pleasure or contentment (or whatever)?

    The Stoics argue that many people's moral preconceptions would be that the right thing is to act courageously for the welfare of one's loved ones so a doctrine that potentially leads us to believe there's no point in doing so unless it contributes to a pleasant life, would leave them in a state of contradiction. Again, for some individuals, that would constitute a reductio ad absurdum. So I imagine some Epicureans might respond by arguing that they do still have a motive, based on Epicurean doctrine, for self-sacrifice in this case, but I've never seen a very clear articulation of that argument. So how would that actually work? On the other hand, I've known at least one modern Epicurean who took the opposite line and said he accepted that his doctrines would provide him with no motive for self-sacrifice in this scenario and that he found that morally acceptable. That's also fine, in a sense, although I think other people are more likely to see that as a kind of extreme morality and to struggle a bit more with the apparent contradiction there.

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    Michael Carteron

    Michael Carteron I can only go by the example here, but the idea that friends would be harmed if an Epicurean doesn't act would by itself bring them pain. Also, the highest pleasure is considered tranquility, from how I understand it, which can be attained even in such circumstances. To repeat, some ignorance appears to be showing here.
    Like · Reply · March 7 at 8:02pm · Edited

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Wow. How rarely I confront an argument with someone focusing on pleasure as the exclusive factor in deciding what to choose and avoid. But pleasure of course is NOT the only factor - there is also PAIN, which tells us what not to do. In the example given, a soldier with an opportunity to save his comrade would be confronted with the question of whether he could live happily in the future knowing that he would be feeling the pain of having passed over the opportunity to save his friend. The calculation is the same as always. If the person in danger is really such a close friend who is so valued that to live with the pain of having passed over saving him would be unbearable, then the Epicurean would save his friend because the future pain would be unbearable, regardless of whether he lived long enough to experience any pleasure at the action of saving him. If the person in danger is some enemy or stranger, then *of course* there is no code of nature which requires us to give up our lives for a stranger or for someone who is of no importance to us personally. If we choose to adopt a "all men are children of god and every life is precious to me" attitude, and then treat strangers like close friends, then by all means knock yourself out. But I would consider no one to be a true friend of mine who valued MY life at the same level as he valued a total stranger.
    Like · Reply · 5 · March 7 at 9:26pm

    Hiram Crespo

    Hiram Crespo Epicurus, on the qualities of a Wise Man, as cited by Diogenes Laertius in Lives of Eminent Philosophers: "He will be armed against fortune and will ***never give up a friend.*** ... . And ***he will on occasion die for a friend **** ... and that friendship is prompted by our needs. One of the friends, however, must make the first advances (just as we have to cast seed into the earth), but it is maintained by a partnership in the enjoyment of life’s pleasures."
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 8 at 12:07pm · Edited

    Hiram Crespo

    Hiram Crespo but self-sacrifice is not a virtue in itself. this is important. it's only expected if the suffering we anticipate by losing our friend is such that it is better to self-sacrifice. only THAT kind of friend would most people self-sacrifice for. **IF** there is a more intelligent and convenient way to SAVE our friend so that no one has to be sacrificed, that is the greatest advantage and produces the most long term pleasure.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 8 at 12:10pm

  • Stoic Challenges To Epicurean Philosophy - 6 - What About Pleasures We Consider Bad Or Evil?

    • Cassius
    • March 11, 2017 at 4:07 PM
    Cassius Amicus

    March 7 at 7:06pm

    **Stoic Challenges To Epicurean Philosophy** (6) From Epictetus... Epicureans believe that pleasure is the highest good. (Again, some people have actually disputed this but I think it's safe to say most Epicureans will go along with that claim, with the usual caveats.) However, most (if not all) pleasures have "intensionality", meaning that they are "about" something, the thing we take pleasure in. In other words, rather than just going around having free-floating pleasures, we're usually enjoying music, or the company of friends, or admiring some idea, or something. If we take pleasure in something, does it not seem (to many people if not all) that it makes more sense to say the thing being enjoyed is good rather than the feeling of enjoyment? When we take pleasure in something, isn't it often because we're judging it to be good at some level? (For Stoics, joy and pleasure, the passions not sensations, are defined as the belief that something good is present, or being experienced by us.)

    We actually have a transcription of Epictetus employing this as a reductio with an Epicurean who visited his school, incidentally. (Some people might claim it's a fabrication, which is fair enough, although there's nothing to indicate that.) If we take pleasure in something bad, are we willing to say that the pleasure is still good? For example, is pleasure taken in torturing small children still good? Or would we need to qualify it and say that pleasure is only good if its object is also good? That seems to introduce a much stronger caveat than is implied in the Epicurean definition of pleasure as the highest good, though. Moreover, pleasure can be good or bad depending on whether its object is good or bad, that implies it's actually morally neutral, or "indifferent", as the Stoics put it. Pleasure in itself is neither good nor bad. Pleasure in bad things, like harming people for fun, is bad; pleasure in good things, like helping loved ones, is good. However, that seems to suggest that it's really the object that is good or bad, in itself, and the feeling of pleasure is only good or bad decoratively, i.e., its actually indifferent in itself. Some people will disagree with those intuitions but for those who accept them, like the Epicurean in the Discourses, it seems to create a contradiction between their professed doctrines and the implications of their moral preconceptions, on reflection.


    Michael Carteron Epicureans agree, as both the hedonic calculus generally and their concept of justice go into this. Really I have to wonder how much he knows about Epicureanism.
    Like · Reply · March 7 at 7:52pm

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker Be very careful agreeing here, his opening sentence is completely disconnected from his conclusion.
    Like · Reply · March 7 at 11:37pm

    Michael Carteron

    Michael Carteron I phrased it poorly, perhaps. More correctly it would be to say "They already went into this, and your reductio won't work."
    Unlike · Reply · 1 · March 7 at 11:39pm · Edited

    Cassius Amicus

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    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios What does it mean to "take pleasure in something bad"?

    Do you mean that the person first judges it as pleasing, but then the same person continues to evaluate the consequences then changes his judgement and considers it an evil? Or do you mean that the person involved experiences pleasure, but other people (observers) judge the choice as bad/unpleasant? The same event can please some people and displease other people. It happens all the time. In wartime, an event brings one side peace and tranquility and may terrorize their enemy.
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · March 8 at 4:20am · Edited

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    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey What is being driven at, I think, is that pleasure in itself is valueless divorced from the object of pleasure. A psychopath torturing a child would be on a par with a nice sandwich.
    Like · Reply · March 7 at 8:46pm · Edited

    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios A psychopath we would throw in jail. A proper subject for restraint.
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · March 7 at 8:47pm

    Alexander Rios

    Alexander RiosImage may contain: text

    Like · Reply · 1 · March 7 at 8:49pm

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey That's interesting. So the assessment of if a pleasure is perverse or not isn't individual. An Epicurean society would police morality in effect. (?)
    Like · Reply · March 8 at 8:09am

    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios How do Epicureans say goodbye?


    "Peace and Safety"!


    Harm is physical. We are bodies. Our soul (nervous system) is a part of our body. We value our lives, as only life provides the opportunity for happiness. Death offers nothing, as that without sensation, cannot experience pain or pleasure. Our soul has a mind, which is capable of memory. We learn. We avoid pain, suffering, and harm. We take action to prevent future harm. So each of us prudently polices.
    Unlike · Reply · 1 · March 8 at 8:42am · Edited

    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios Torquatus' multigenerational Epicurean ancestors engaged in battles to defend their way of life.
    Unlike · Reply · 1 · March 8 at 8:45am

    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios All people on Earth are homosapiens. We all suffer: hunger, thirst, cold. Bodies (human, animal, plants) like to metabolize.
    Like · Reply · March 8 at 8:56am · Edited

    Hiram Crespo

    Hiram Crespo Jimmy Daltrey a society does not need to be Epicurean to police crime, as far as I know. Unless you're in Somalia and some other societies, generally you have access to judicial process. If you do not, it may be impossible to live a life of pleasure there, and you should migrate elsewhere for the sake of safety, for "anything you do for the sake of safety is a natural good". But yes, to live a life of pleasure, you will in all likelihood need to live under some kind of rule of law.
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · March 8 at 10:57am

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus I agree with Hiram, with the additional clarification that there are probably many systems that will work in different contexts (rather than just the "rule of law" which might have some issues if it implies a single universal law). The bottom line is that I think history shows that there generally has to be **some** kind of mechanism in place or else bad things are going to happen.
    Like · Reply · March 8 at 11:14am

    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios Neighbors can get together as friends, and agree that some other neighbors are a danger to the peace and safety of those who came together, and they can work together, form contracts, and work together to restrain or expell.
    Like · Reply · March 8 at 12:12pm

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey I'm not sure why that surprised me.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 8 at 1:37pm

    Cassius Amicus

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    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus "For Stoics, joy and pleasure, the passions not sensations, are defined as the belief that something good is present, or being experienced by us" << This is a key sentence. The belief that "something good" is present implies that there is some "essence of good" apart from the experience, analogous to Plato saying that there is "something ideal" exists separately in another dimension or Aristotle saying "something essential" exists in the thing in this dimension. I believe Epicurus would dispute this, and say that observation of nature (physics) establishes that all things are made of matter and void, and there are no ideal forms outside a thing nor essences within a thing. That leaves pleasure and pain to be considered as faculties, which is where Epicurus arranged them with the main set of faculties (the five senses) and also the anticipations (which I think are also best interpreted as faculties, as are all components of the "canon of truth.") So the entire approach of attempting to identify "good" and "bad" floating in the air or hiding within things is an abstract conceptual exercise that is doomed to failure. The only measure of whether we should consider a thing "good" or "bad" within itself is whether it gives us pleasure or pain.
    Like · Reply · 3 · March 7 at 9:00pm

    Hiram Crespo

    Hiram Crespo BY which criteria do we KNOW that something is "good", how do we apprehend something "good"? Via pleasure. But one can not speak of the good without it being relative to the enjoyer, because one beer might be good, the second and third might not (based on after-effects); one piece of chocolate cake may be pleasant, but the second of third may be too dense.

    So "the good" is not chocolate cake or beer. They're only goods when they are pleasures that do not lead to disadvantage later.

    So if you **lose sight of the goal that your nature seeks** (pleasure), then you miss the enjoyment of "the goods" seeking after ideas rather than listening to your faculties. This is why it's dangerous to Platonize goods.

    Students of Epicurus must keep in mind that pleasure-aversion is a FACULTY.

    As for the "pleasure in torturing small children"--the disadvantage comes from either spending the rest of your life in jail, or fearing that you will spend it in jail, or if you ARE a tyrant in a position of absolute authority, the disadvantage comes from the paranoia of tyrants: Saddam and Ghaddafi, and their family members, suffered greatly when the mobs rose against them, but even before that they trembled in their thrones. I think there's a Lucretius passage about kings trembling in their thrones, in fact.

    Thousands of members of the Catholic clergy have also had to eventually face justice for their long-standing culture of predatory behavior. So both those in power and ordinary citizens eventually get disadvantages from "taking pleasure in torturing small children".
    Unlike · Reply · 3 · March 8 at 10:54am

  • Introduction To Eight Part Series - Stoic Challenges To Epicurean Philosophy

    • Cassius
    • March 11, 2017 at 4:04 PM
    Cassius Amicus

    March 7 at 7:13pm

    I apologize to any of our regular readers who are not pleased to see eight consecutive posts with Stoic arguments in them, but these are a special case, I think - a distinguished Stoic leader has kindly collected them for us and presented them here. They are well stated and largely taken from the classic anti-Epicurean arguments that have prevailed with the majority of the Academic world for hundreds and even thousands of years. I cannot think of a better test and exercise of our understanding of Epicurean philosophy than to consider these and compose appropriate responses. I have posted them in separate threads to make discussion of responses more orderly. As you think about responses, think about the founder of our philosophy and how he might reply, and also consider what Cosma Raimondi wrote:

    "But since I have always followed and wholly approved the authority and doctrine of Epicurus, the very wisest of men, and now see his standing bitterly attacked, harassed, and distorted by you, I have taken it upon myself to defend him. It is only right that tried and true pupils (as I have proved myself in all fields of learning) should defend their master’s teaching when it is attacked. Otherwise when teachers are criticized the pupil’s studies may themselves seem to be under attack: the great pains you have taken to gather material against Epicurus seem directed not so much at refuting him but me, his follower and disciple. But I shall pay you back as you deserve.

    It is not just a dispute between ourselves, for all the ancient philosophers, principally the three sects of Academics, Stoics and Aristotelians, declared war to the death against this one man who was the master of them all. Their onslaught sought to leave no place for him in philosophy and to declare all his opinions invalid — in my view, because they were envious at seeing so many more pupils taking themselves to the school of Epicurus than to their own. So I shall now set about doing within the limits of a letter what I had meant to do at greater length elsewhere and defend him as fully as I can. And if the defense appears rather long-winded, it might well seem too short when you consider that debate on this topic could fill not just a longish letter but thick books."

    And from Lucian of Samosata: "My object, dear friend, in making this small selection from a great mass of material has been twofold. First, I was willing to oblige a friend and comrade who is for me the pattern of wisdom, sincerity, good humor, justice, tranquillity, and geniality. But secondly I was still more concerned (a preference which you may be far from resenting) to strike a blow for Epicurus, that great man whose holiness and divinity of nature were not shams, who alone had and imparted true insight into the good, and who brought deliverance to all that consorted with him."

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    14Elli Pensa, Matt Jackson and 12 others

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    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus It took a long time (even centuries) to come up with these questions, so we will not be able to answer them completely today or this week. I will find a way to link to them in the future so we can find the discussion and supplement it over time.
    Like · Reply · 3 · March 7 at 7:21pm · Edited

    ɳɑʈɧɑɳ ɧɑɾɾʏ ɓɑɾʈɱɑɳ

    ɳɑʈɧɑɳ ɧɑɾɾʏ ɓɑɾʈɱɑɳ I wish to invoke a maxim my mother always told me when I was a kid, without purposefully appropriating the verbiage of the Stoics, but, I can't, so, here goes:


    "Patience is a virtue."


    (Sorry!) Or, perhaps:


    "Patience is pleasurable."


    Or, better yet, I'll be neutral, here:


    "Patience... far out!"

  • Could Epicurean Involvement In Politics Have Prevented The Fall of Greco-Roman Civilization?

    • Cassius
    • March 11, 2017 at 4:02 PM
    Nick Bell

    March 8 at 9:45am

    Some random thoughts on the epicurean stance on politics,i understand the idea of minimalizing the focus and stress of politics,however,i wonder if that no-participation stance may have also helped in their decline. Epicurean schools were going strong for hundreds of years,and then the christian takeover happened which lead to the outlawing of anything non christian across europe. My thought is that there was a point in time where the christian movement was small and just beginning to gain political favor and power,maybe if the garden schools had been a little more involved in the politics they could have helped disuade said takeover?

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    7You, Jason Baker, Christos Tsigaridas and 4 others

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    Tanya Watkins

    Tanya Watkins My thoughts were, that when Epicurus was alive, to be involved in politics was a very dangerous thing. At that time, it could bring no contentment to your life. It was a situational response.
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · March 8 at 9:52am

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus I think that's a very reasonable discussion to have, especially as to what few details are known about what actually happened in that period. Regulars here know my citation to the example of Cassius Longinus as someone very involved in public affairs. The example of Atticus is also relevant, as is the example of the Epicurean who was assisting Antiochus Epiphanes. Also there are relevant comments in Sedly's "Ethics of Brutus and Cassius. And at the most basic level possible, there is the obvious example that the PD's as to justice are not self-enforcing - if bad people are to be restrained from harming us, **someone** has to do it, and it would not be Epicurean to look to others what we should do for ourselves.


    I am aware that the comments that Tanya raised are the generally accepted opinion about what was going on in Athens at the time of Epicurus. But I don't think that that time period is by any means the last word on the topic, and excessive focus on it to the exclusion of the rest of Epicurean history after the founding is probably an inaccurate way to look at the subject. (Again not referring to Tanya Watkins as being inaccurate, but to the general observation that you see almost everywhere that Epicurean philosophy was part of a "crisis of nerve" of the Greeks.)


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    Like · Reply · 3 · March 8 at 10:16am · Edited

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus I would also note that our group preference for staying away from modern politics is largely to keep the focus on the core philosophy, and avoiding getting distracted and stirred up by short-term issues when there is so much work to do on the bigger picture of the philosophy, rather than a flat prohibition for philosophical reasons. If and when there is more interest in discussing the political implications, we can possibly split that off into one or more separate groups.
    Like · Reply · 4 · March 8 at 10:03am

    Hiram Crespo

    Hiram Crespo as for political Epicureans: Thomas Jefferson, Frances Wright (who was a feminist and abolitionist and defended atheists i nthe 1800's), and Jose Mujica former president of uruguay also praises Epicurus from time to time. I think that the choice to delve into politics must be subjected to hedonic calculus in all cases, there is no blanket taboo against politics.
    Unlike · Reply · 6 · March 8 at 10:07am

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Now the issue of dealing with Christianity in its early phases, which is a large part of your initial post Nick Bell, is a VERY interesting topic. I've read a good bit of Gibbon on that period, and he has some very famous analysis of the problem and how it contributed to the fall of the Roman Empire.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 8 at 10:10am

    Michael Carteron

    Michael Carteron I think that his view is no longer in favor. The view now seems to be Christianity was an effect, not cause, of the Roman Empire falling.
    Like · Reply · March 8 at 7:46pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Michael Carteron do you recall any sources for that? Probably I would easily agree that they went hand in hand and hard to tell which caused which. (And no doubt the opposing view is what the Christians would (and did) argue 1f609.png;) )
    Like · Reply · March 8 at 8:03pm · Edited

    Michael Carteron

    Michael Carteron No, not offhand. I doubt that just Christianity alone would take down the Roman Empire however. Apparently it got more popular with the decline, especially after the third century crisis. I don't know every detail however, just that I've read Gibbon is largely viewed as outdated and discredited.
    Like · Reply · March 8 at 8:14pm · Edited

    Cassius Amicus

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    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius AmicusImage may contain: text

    Like · Reply · 1 · March 8 at 10:12am

    Tanya Watkins

    Tanya Watkins But sure, from to OP's questioning, being move involved would have allowed the idea to survive more strongly. But you also must come back to is it making you content to have that fight? Where is the ideal?
    Like · Reply · March 8 at 10:16am

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus "But you also must come back to is it making you content to have that fight? Where is the ideal?" That is the continuing quest - to determine the real heart of Epicurean philosophy. Was it to escape pain at all costs, or was it to secure a life of happiness, which requires much more than hiding in a cave? My views on that question are pretty clear 1f609.png;)
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 8 at 10:17am

    Tanya Watkins

    Tanya Watkins So, how, as your average person, in Hellenistic times, see the big picture?
    Like · Reply · March 8 at 10:19am

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Good question Tanya. What I am referring to is what I understand to be the observation made over and over again by others that at the time of Epicurus Athens was under pressure, and no longer militarily on top, and so as a result of that everyone (including Stoics and Epicureans turned inward, said "woe is me" and went to hide in a cave because they no longer thought they could conquer the world. Now of course that's a caricature but it is what I gather is a widely-held opinion -----


    For an example of that I seem to see regular references to a Hellenisic "failure of nerve" -


    A phrase from his [Gilbert Murray] 1910 lectures Four Stages of Greek Religion enjoyed public prominence: the "failure of nerve" of the Hellenistic world, of which a turn to irrationalism was symptomatic.[49]


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    Like · Reply · 1 · March 8 at 10:32am · Edited

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus another reference to the "failure of nerve" https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=https%…fF2LztrldDx8Cvg

    Failure of Nerve page
    Gilbert Murray describes the descent from the height of third century B.C. Greek…
    ROSSMOORATHEISTS.INFO

    Like · Reply · Remove Preview · 1 · March 8 at 10:33am

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Elli Pensa, what do you think of the idea of a Greek "failure of nerve" and whether Epicurus was a part of it?
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 8 at 10:34am

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus {And of course I do NOT think that Epicurus himself had this "failure of nerve," and to the extent that it existed, he was reacting against it, just as Nick Bell is asking about}
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 8 at 10:38am · Edited

    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa Failure of Nerve

    That is a proper phrase when someone examines the phenomena and what causes them.


    In the Hellenistic era of Epicurus after the death of Great Alexander and the fighting among his descendants who were thirsty for power, in Ancient Athens everything around was collapsed. Things/issues and ideas that brought the descendants of Alexander from East created a decadence in the greek philosophy. Thus, we see the domain schools that were in period of decadence were the Stoic and the Epicurean. But the Epicurean philosophy was, is and would be a huge exception.


    Because..

    As we realize the main core of the stoic philosophy is the Moral Act and based its Physics on deterministic Fate or Destiny or Eimarmeni. Thus, the people of Epicurus era became fatalistic by the teachings of the stoicism, and when someone is fatalistic is unable to find solutions in every difficult situation. If you connect now to the Fate and the Apathy and the foggy dream of a goal as the Virtue, the persons become more incapable and not autonomus to change the laws that imposed to them from oligarchy and tyranny. Someone would say : But why the Epicureans that were many in the Hellenistic era did not manage to change those situations of troubles ? Because the Epicureans won’t have the ambition to get involved with the politics if they do not be invited for this. In opposite the stoics are ready to get involved in the politics. Here fits the greek expression “opou gamos ke chara e Vasilo proti” and that means "Where there's feasting, of all guests, there Victoria's always first". But when the feast will end back to the same things again and again,


    Fatalism and the oriental cunning


    <<You have to desire the things to be as they are and not as you wish to be. " Epictetus here. This is a premier sample of a masterful art of life, as they say, close to palliative practices and an outright oriental cunning. Just leave it, he says, it is well ordered from Destiny, that knows before you. It is best to understand that you are part of the Nature and accept with welcomes, even with joy, whatever brings you. He will not make a mistake even if it is bad for you. Good or bad is irrelevant since it is part of the "divine becoming". (Δημήτρης Λιαρμακόπουλος Dimitris Liarmakopoulos from his article entitled : We, the epicureans, and the stoic today or to these "from the Stoa")>>.


    Passions and freedom of will


    Professor Theodoridis, and professor Liantinis denounce the stoicism as a philosophy opposing the Greek way. We would agree with them when we see what the stoic reserve the emotions, the passions and the freedom of will, the evidence that we have identified as the "property" of the strong individuality of a Greek man.

    The Greeks, as Nietzsche says, and we have talked about this many times in the Garden, first release their passions, and then with prudence their pull them back.

    In Epicurean philosophy our feelings are criteria of truth, with what we experience pleasant and unpleasant, so we used the options and our avoidances. Unlike the stoic not only ignore but recommend outset the Apathy. They suggest restriction on the exercise of our passions at the point to uproot them. Epictetus says: "Stand beside a stone and accuse it. What would you be able to manage? "

    In any case advise us to be indifferent for the things themselves because as they say only our judgments for the things is important. This is not entirely wrong, but how to be indifferent for their impact on you? Only if you stifle your feelings. Here we find a strong affinity with the Buddhism. (Dimitris Liarmakopoulos from his article entitled : We, the epicureans, and the stoic today or to those "from the Stoa")


    Later after the Roman empire we see these two schools to influence many persons of politics in the Rome too and when there was “Failure of Nerve” we see which philosophy was dominated again.


    Later after we see the Byzantine empire that there was an entire “Failure of Nerve”

    and we see again which philosophy transformed to religion and is dominated till our days again.


    And in our days ? And mankind reckons time from the dies nefastus when this fatality befell— from the first day of Christianity!

    — Why not rather from its last?— From today?— The transvaluation of all values!...(Nietzshe)


    The transvaluation of all values!... here I want you crab to walk on coals. 1f61b.png:P
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 8 at 5:04pm · Edited

    Cassius Amicus

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    Bill Aheron

    Bill Aheron Just a thought, but going through life with the goal of maximizing pleasure by avoiding unpleasure, seems like pretty small beer.
    Like · Reply · March 8 at 11:11am · Edited

    Bill Aheron

    Bill Aheron Ontological validity of "atoms & void" to one side
    Like · Reply · March 8 at 11:12am

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus And yet even though some might want to argue that the glass of beer is small, I would argue that a small glass of beer is better than a fantasy glass of beer.
    Like · Reply · 4 · March 8 at 11:16am · Edited

    Bill Aheron

    Bill Aheron Well put. 1f642.png:)
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 8 at 11:17am

    Cassius Amicus

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    Ilkka Vuoristo

    Ilkka Vuoristo Unfortunately such changes in history aren't simple or have one reason. The only way that any other worldview could have prevented the rise of christianity, was to be made the _state_ religion instead of it. And to suppress all other views with force. I can't see any way that Epicurean Philosophy could have endured so much hypocrisy as the followers of Jesus have endured.


    Christianity won the battle for Rome, because the emperor saw it as a way to maintain power. We have to remember that at the time of Constantine (~300 AD), there were _many_ christianities. He's the one that says what goes into the Bible and what does not. Almost all of modern christianity is the product of Constantine's committee and Paul... That is to say of Romans.
    Unlike · Reply · 5 · March 8 at 4:55pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus And then there is the fascinating story of "Julian the Apostate" (who unfortunately does not appear to have been a fan of Epicurus)
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 8 at 5:42pm

  • Are There Epicurean Role Models?

    • Cassius
    • March 11, 2017 at 4:00 PM


    Jimmy Daltrey

    March 8 at 6:44am

    Are there Epicurean role models?

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    3Jason Baker and 2 others

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    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus You mean ancient ones (of course Epicurus himself was considered a great role model) or modern or in-between?
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 8 at 6:46am

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey I mean people we could look at today. Modern.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 8 at 6:57am

    Hiram Crespo

    Hiram Crespo Epicurus. Yang chu. Thomas Jefferson. Frances wright. Michel onfray. I want to say George Carlin but hes mixed Cynic. And christopher Hitchens. None were perfect. But they were great for different reasons.
    Like · Reply · 4 · March 8 at 8:27am

    Hiram Crespo

    Hiram Crespo Lucian of Samosata
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 8 at 8:32am

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus You could certainly find some people whose personal characteristics embody partial aspects of an Epicurean approach to life, especially ethics, and that would be worthwhile to think about. But I think it would fall short in an important respect: following the ancient discussions as to the highest type of man, for a true and complete role model we would want to find also an intellectual understanding and ability to articulate the nature of the universe, gods, death, and the role of pleasure. And given the state of the world and the intimidating pressure to conform to common concepts of religion and virtue, that is very difficult to name.
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 8 at 9:03am

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Following Hiram's suggestion and other comments I have heard, it is possible that Michel Onfray would be someone to consider for a list of Epicurean role models. But I know nothing about Onfrey's personal or professional life, nor more importantly what his ultimate opinion of Epicurus was. In the summaries I see little acknowledgement that Onfray was primarily Epicurean (Epicurus is generally mentioned only as an influence, and he seems to prefer Cynics (?)) I would be cautious. To find someone who explicitly endorsed Epicurus you probably have to go back to Jefferson and Frances Wright, and there are limits to both of those too.https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=https%…0a1R23c1uSKBOH4

    Michel Onfray on the Epicurean Garden as the anti-Republic • r/Epicureanism
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    Hiram Crespo

    Hiram Crespo former president Mujica of Uruguay
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 8 at 9:16am

    Hiram Crespo

    Hiram Crespo and the fandom / cult of the Big Lebowski may swear that "the Dude is a great Epicurean role model (or vice versa that Epicurus was a great dude)
    Like · Reply · 5 · March 8 at 9:17am

    Nick Bell

    Nick Bell Lol yes right here^^ the dude is absolutely an epicurean!
    Like · Reply · March 8 at 9:30am

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker A NSFW Dudeist translation of the tetrapharmakos lifted directly from the Dudism forum:


    1 - Can't be worried about supernatural shit man. Fuck it!

    2 - Life is short, just take it easy man. worried about death? Fuck it!

    3 - That rug really ties the room together man. I'm content, Fuck it!

    4 - Well, you know... The dude abides!


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    Hiram Crespo

    Hiram Crespo The dudeists have an annual gathering already. Theyre better organized than we are!
    Like · Reply · March 8 at 5:13pm

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker 1f641.png:(
    Like · Reply · March 8 at 9:06pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Write a reply...

    Bill Aheron

    Bill Aheron Yous never do anything noteworthy. Stay in yer gardens, & let the Big Fellas lead and make the frikkn' History. No Pain, no achievement, don't expect to have it both ways.
    Like · Reply · March 8 at 1:20pm

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker Bill Aheron, Do you mean You as in those present or as in Epicureans in general?
    Like · Reply · March 8 at 4:41pm

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker To the first I would say, "By golly, I shake my stick at you! Don't deprive us of our victories over unnecessary suffering! We're counting coup every day."


    To the second, killing Caesar, igniting the Renaissance, and declaring independence from tyrannical monarchy seems pretty noteworthy to me.
    Like · Reply · 3 · March 8 at 4:48pm

    Mish Taylor

    Mish Taylor The 'big fellas' are doing such a great job, the world has never been in such disarray...DOH! 1f609.png;)
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 8 at 5:18pm

    Michael Fulton

    Michael Fulton Well, that's like, your opinion, man.
    Like · Reply · March 8 at 8:24pm

    Michael Fulton

    Michael Fulton Jason Baker Brutus and gang were Epicureans?
    Like · Reply · March 8 at 8:31pm

    Michael Fulton

    Michael Fulton I know Cassius was...



  • Stoic Challenges To Epicurean Philosophy - 1 - Do Not People Agree That Virtue More Admirable Than Pleasure?

    • Cassius
    • March 11, 2017 at 3:57 PM
    Cassius Amicus

    March 7 at 7:02pm

    **Stoic Challenges To Epicurean Philosophy** (1): Suppose some person attains a perfect state of pleasure. (I'll leave it for others to define, as it seems to me there's some disagreement among modern Epicureans about exactly how this should be defined, but that probably doesn't matter.) Compare that to another person who exhibits exceptional moral wisdom and courage. Let's suppose that (likely or not) they appear quite different in other regards: so the pleasure exemplar isn't known for virtue and the virtue exemplar isn't known for "pleasure". Does history not show that the majority of people tend to find the second type of person more admirable and praiseworthy? Is it not the case that those qualities better meet our preconception of what's supremely good in life? (Some people will undoubtedly disagree but I think most would agree with the above.)

    Suppose, for the sake of argument, that an Epicurean said that on reflection, he probably did find wisdom and courage, in themselves, more admirable than pleasure/contentment, or whatever. If his doctrine is that pleasure is the supreme good, that would appear to highlight a contradiction between his implicit moral values and his professed philosophy. That's the type of reductio argument, I would expect a Stoic to use with an individual Epicurean. (Again, there will be some individuals who simply reject the premises, but that's okay.) Someone else might admit they admire wisdom and courage (virtue) more than "pleasure" in other people, on reflection, but deny that's a problematic sort of contradiction. They might say they're happy admiring qualities in other people more than they desire them for themselves. The Stoics, though, would challenge that as hypocrisy and argue that we all should (and at some level do) desire to be consistent in our thinking, especially about such important matters as our moral values.

    I think they'd want to argue that there is a problem if we try to separate what we value most about the character of other people from what we value most for ourselves. They see that sort of conflict in our values as a sort of alienation from the rest of mankind. If what I actually admire most about other people is their wisdom and moral integrity then that sort of thing should be my priority for myself as well. On the other hand, if what I admire most about them is how pleasantly contented their life is, then that should probably be my own number one goal in life too. There aren't very many figures in history whom people admire for being like Epicurus in that respect, though. There are obviously many more examples of historical figures who are admired for what we call virtue, or strength of character. Now that's not intended as a proof, merely an illustration. The individual would need to reflect on their own moral preconceptions and determine whether they're being applied consistently or not, maybe by looking at the range of figures they most admire in life themselves (not merely the ones the rest of society admires).



    ɳɑʈɧɑɳ ɧɑɾɾʏ ɓɑɾʈɱɑɳ I think there is an error in supposing that 'a perfectly happy Epicurean' and 'a perfectly wise Stoic' should necessarily appear quite different. To me, regardless of the meta-discourse each uses to express their philosophy, the two, if they are as 'undisturbed' as each truly claims to be, should nonetheless bare similarly desirable fruits: patience, reflection, consistency, analysis, equanimity, composure.


    If I were to play devil's advocate, and attempt to persuade a 'real' Stoic and a 'real' Epicurean that it is a positive thing to intravenously take heroin, I would expect both philosophers to reject my premise. They both would likely point out drug withdrawal, and symptoms of substance abuse, and argue that habituated heroin use is a negative. Regardless of our identifying it as being 'un-virtuous' or 'un-pleasurable,' the end result is the same: avoid heroin.


    The contrast between these two philosophies is important, but I see danger in the mere intellectual act of comparison. It can lead to an over-emphasis on the differences, which may marginalize the underlying similarities that contribute to hyperbole. Within this context, I think that 'the Epicurean' has been unfairly portrayed as a selfish party monster in constant danger of becoming a conflict-avoidant agoraphobe. Likewise, the 'Stoic' sounds more and more like a sexless monk suffering from a dissociative personality disorder. Neither of these caricatures are human.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 7 at 7:39pm · Edited

    Michael Carteron

    Michael Carteron I don't think Epicureans believe these things can be separated to begin with. The average person is likely to find a cheerless though brave person, who is unhappy yet virtuous, also lacking.
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 7 at 8:14pm · Edited

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey I get the impression that the ancients threw rocks at each other over different arguments: the Stoics that pleasure is base and animalistic, the Epicureans that a belief in providence is superstition.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 7 at 8:28pm

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    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker Absolutely. The arguments against Epicurean philosophy that I read really seem like naive nonsense that a week hitting the books would cure. Given some of the responses we see here, it seems that our criticisms of Stoicism don't hit the mark because no one who comes here is a Real Stoic™ that believes in providence anymore. 1f603.png:D
    Like · Reply · March 7 at 9:27pm

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey Seneca actually quotes Epicurus to justify this "What is good is easy to get", that humans and the Cosmos are adapted to one another. The Stoics are certainly creationists, although their God is immanent, present in matter, not transcendent like the Pl...See More
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 8 at 6:17am · Edited

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker I really don't think it can be stated enough, that without belief in Providence, Stoic ethics have no foundation. There is no rational basis for choosing one virtue over another without it, unless pleasure enters the equation.
    Like · Reply · March 8 at 9:57am

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey The Stoic would argue from nature, that animals are motivated by pleasure, however humans have intellect also, so our natures are different. Humans are moved by understanding, by reason (as well as pleasure). Virtue is no more than applied wisdom.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 8 at 1:21pm

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker Of course that begs the question on what basis is wisdom founded. 1f642.png:)
    Like · Reply · March 8 at 1:53pm

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey Same basis as the Epicureans, observation from nature. Compare a prudent man to a foolish man. The Epicurean calculus requires prudence, the foolish fall into drunkenness and obesity.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 8 at 2:02pm · Edited

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker Certainly but the Epicurean calculus can be tested immediately. The feeling of pleasure and pain is imminent and irrational, needing nothing more than to be noted. Post hoc rationalization is the only way for a Stoic to judge an action as virtuous. What standard does he have but vagaries that are subject to time and place?
    Like · Reply · March 8 at 2:19pm

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker Specifically Donald mentioned repeatedly the need to compare and admire other virtuous men. This seems quite unorthodox, a direct borrowing from Aristotle. It's a direct appeal to culture, which we know can have a corrupting influence and prevent men from becoming wise.
    Like · Reply · March 8 at 2:25pm · Edited

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey The virtue of an action is determined by its intent and its intent is determined by the character/wisdom of the individual. Both Stoics and Epicurean can be mistaken in their assessment of a situation. The Stoic leans hard on cold assessment, accurate ...See More
    Like · Reply · March 8 at 2:28pm

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey Hercules is admired as a role model.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 8 at 2:29pm

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker I don't see religion and emotions having much to do with one another directly.


    The road to hel is paved with good intentions. 1f609.png;)
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 8 at 2:31pm

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker Apologies for my brevity, I'm dealing with other issues right now.
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 8 at 2:34pm · Edited

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey That's a fair criticism, however it depends on the nature of your intentions as to how far out of whack your plans can go. The more prudent you are the less you run a risk of it all going pear shaped.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 8 at 2:35pm

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker I think that's too close to Donald's criticism of Epicureans wanting to control their experience to not be tarred with the same brush.
    Like · Reply · March 8 at 2:39pm

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey I don't follow. Can you elaborate?
    Like · Reply · March 8 at 2:45pm

    Michael Carteron

    Michael Carteron The world does suck in lots of ways (just not all). So where does that leave us with Providence?
    Like · Reply · March 8 at 8:44pm

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey That it doesn't suck completely, and if it were different in any significant way, we wouldn't be here. As an atheist I like to think that the Anthropic principle covers Providence. Imagine living on Venus or Mars...you couldn't, we get to live here which is cool 1f60e.png?
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    Michael Carteron

    Michael Carteron Providence is defined as "divine guidance and care" so I think I'd call it "good fortune" myself, though yes, it appears the Anthropic Principle covers it. The ancient Stoics would disagree however, as do many now.
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 9 at 8:39pm · Edited

    Cassius Amicus

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    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus (1) in a world dominated by Christianity and Islam, I most emphatically reject the "opinion of the majority" as determining what is admirable and praiseworthy. Quite possibly I would feel differently about the majority if I were living in 70 BC Rome and Italy had been swept by an Epicurean wave, as Cicero complains. So I consider the "opinion of the majority" to be of little to no help in these ethical issues. [ "Does history not show that the majority of people tend to find the second type of person more admirable and praiseworthy?"] VS 29 "In investigating nature I would prefer to speak openly and like an oracle to give answers serviceable to all mankind, even though no one should understand me, rather than to conform to popular opinions and so win the praise freely scattered by the mob." VS45 "The study of nature does not make men productive of boasting or bragging nor apt to display that culture which is the object of rivalry with the many, but high-spirited and self-sufficient, taking pride in the good things of their own minds and not of their circumstances."
    Like · Reply · 3 · March 7 at 9:09pm

    Elli Pensa

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    Michael Carteron

    Michael Carteron The appeal to majority is simply a fallacy, of no merit.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 7 at 9:10pm

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey What he is trying to get at is the question: is someone who runs into a burning building to save a child a "better" person than say, a monk, who spends his life in serene and tranquil meditation? Most people would say the former (I think), where that observation takes us would be the next step in the debate.
    Like · Reply · March 8 at 6:40am · Edited

    Michael Carteron

    Michael Carteron Well it wasn't clear from his post. So, better how?
    Like · Reply · March 8 at 8:45am

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey That is the question. What do we value? How do we arrive at our values? How do we justify our values? It all gets very Socratic.
    Like · Reply · March 8 at 1:14pm

    Michael Carteron

    Michael Carteron Yes, it is difficult.
    Like · Reply · March 9 at 8:36pm

    Cassius Amicus

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    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus (2) The word "admire" as used as the basis of this question is also curious ("On the other hand, if what I admire most about them..."). I see two main definitions of admire (1 "regard (an object, quality, or person) with respect or warm approval".) or 2 "look at with pleasure." Definition 2 poses no problems and unwinds the issue - if I regard something as pleasurable and find that desirable, then I have properly identified the issue. Definition 1 however implies the road to the false problem - it implies that I have "reasoned" myself to the conclusion that there is something about the thing more important than that it is pleasurable. One can imagine all sorts of things, and have all sorts of fantasies, but in the end matters of opinion have nothing to rest on but .... opinion. Pleasure, however, is a faculty that is easily understood by all men, and needs no explanation or justification. "Hence Epicurus refuses to admit any necessity for argument or discussion to prove that pleasure is desirable and pain to be avoided. These facts, he thinks, are perceived by the senses, as that fire is hot, snow is white, honey is sweet. None of these things need be proved by elaborate argument -- it is enough merely to draw attention to them. For there is a difference, he holds, between formal syllogistic proof of a thing and a mere notice or reminder. The former is the method for discovering abstruse and recondite truths, the latter for indicating facts that are obvious and evident.” (Torquatus/Cicero/On Ends)
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 7 at 9:15pm

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker Let's turn the main argument around, just to get a feel for how useful it is for illuminating things.


    Suppose, for the sake of argument, that a Stoic said that on reflection he probably did find pleasure, in itself, more preferable than courage, tranq...See More
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    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa Jason Baker
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    Hiram Crespo

    Hiram Crespo VS 29 is critical of the the morality of the mobs. I am sure that many people admire the so-called "virtuous" over the people who lead lives of pleasure, but this says nothing about how we can be happy. It also is the kind of question asked by someone who has absolutely no interest in being authentic or genuine or natural, who will subject himself to the whims and the values and ideals invented in the heads of others.
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 8 at 10:04am

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey I don't think donning the air of virtue in exchange for acclaim is approved of. Hypocrisy is not a virtue.
    Like · Reply · March 8 at 1:16pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Unfortunately I am afraid that the crowd often approves exactly that, even if the hypocrisy is transparent.
    Like · Reply · 3 · March 8 at 1:22pm

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey True. Who is it that said you can't reason with a crowd?
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · March 8 at 1:44pm · Edited

    Hiram Crespo

    Hiram Crespo . or that appeasing the crowd is a path to pleasant existence. It is the path of politicians and lawyers maybe.
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · March 8 at 2:08pm

  • Stoic Challenges To Epicurean Philosophy - 8 - Objection to the Epicurean Doctrine That Virtue Is only of Value as An Instrumentality to achieve Pleasure

    • Cassius
    • March 11, 2017 at 3:55 PM
    Cassius Amicus

    March 7 at 7:08pm

    **Stoic Challenges To Epicurean Philosophy** (8) Seneca and others also object to the Epicurean doctrine that makes virtue of value only instrumentally, as a means to attaining pleasure, as follows. (Again, some modern Epicureans may dispute this interpretation of Epicurus, although others tell me they accept it and agree with it as a philosophy of life.) Someone who acts bravely for the sake of a reward, arguably isn't really brave at all. (Again, some people will accept this particular moral intuition, others will not.) To endure danger for money isn't real bravery, it's just greed. And the same would apply to rewards such as pleasure: acting bravely to win some reward as a consequence isn't really what we mean by bravery, on reflection. The same would apply to the virtue of temperance.

    Not snacking on chips for a week because someone's offered me a million dollars to do so, wouldn't, on the face of it, constitute praiseworthy (virtuous) self-mastery. It's the ability to control our desires in the *absence* of a strong reward for doing so that's actually required for the virtue of temperance. What about justice, kindness, and fairness? If I'm only treating other people kindly and fairly because I believe I'm going to gain some reward for so doing then arguably that's not really the virtue of justice at all. Doesn't the same apply if I see justice as indifferent in itself, and only of value as a means to obtaining "pleasure" (in the Epicurean sense)? So the Stoics, and others, argue that our preconceptions about virtue separate it from people acting in similar ways for personal gain, or pleasure. Someone who wants to preserve that conception of virtue but also professes to follow the Epicurean doctrine is arguably going to have to reconcile those two things somehow or accept that they're in contradiction.

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    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios Before we begin, somebody please tell my why Stoics pursue virtue. If a virtuous action is not rewarded by our biology or some other external entity, at some future/present time then why do stoics (or people) spend so much matter/motion pursuing it?
    Unlike · Reply · 3 · March 7 at 7:20pm · Edited

    Ron Warrick

    Ron Warrick "Virtue is its own reward." But if there is a foreknown reward, it isn't virtue!
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 9 at 1:03am

    Cassius Amicus

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    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios Courage is bravery in the face of fear or a threat. Usually we do it to preserve or save something we hold dear. Something or someone whom we prefer to have in our life. The thought of losing it or them is painful, and so we take the risk of some pain or loss now in order to secure peace, safety, and happiness in the future. Taking the risk of endangering ourselves in the process of doing so is considered bravery.


    It is not brave to risk our peace, safety, health or happiness for something or somebody that we don't care about. It is foolish. For example I would not risk my safety or health to save POTUS45. I would be pleased if he were gone. I see no nobility in saving him, and much happiness in his removal.


    The standard Epicurean responses follow. Courtesy of Torquatus.
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · March 7 at 7:44pm · Edited

    Alexander Rios

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    Michael Carteron

    Michael Carteron Yes, all of these things being "good in themselves" seems absurd. Ask people why they are honest, kind, or whatever. The answer would invariably be along the line of "Because it's better when people act this way" when pressed, i.e. it's pleasing and leads to happiness. I fail to see why that makes this not "really" honest, kind, etc.
    Unlike · Reply · 3 · March 7 at 7:45pm · Edited

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus At this moment I can't think of much to add to what Alexander and Michael wrote. The question clearly captures the Stoic position that virtue is an end in itself, and quite clearly implies or states explicitly that happiness / pleasure is irrelevant, and if present are indeed factors that make the act of virtue ignoble or less praiseworthy. And there are still people who like to argue that the goal of Stoicism is happiness? I give credit to Donald Robertson that he (and at least a segment of his modern Stoics) do not engage in that sleight of hand.
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 7 at 9:42pm

    Hiram Crespo

    Hiram Crespo Many worship at the altar of Virtue but few stop to inspect the pedestal on which she stands. -- A Few Days in Athens

    If bravery does not lead to a life of pleasure, why worship at its altar? Same with temperance! And wealth / money. Most of us will need a natural measure of these "virtues" in life at some point or another, depending on our circumstances. That's fine. They are not ends in themselves: they have value in accordance to their advantages.
    Like · Reply · 3 · March 8 at 12:20pm

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker It was mentioned in another thread recently that Stoics are always preparing for their world to be turned upside down so that they might survive any trouble with indifference. What a meager ration! Flourishing is my aim, not mere survival.
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 8 at 12:43pm

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    Hiram Crespo

    Hiram Crespo Let us use a real world example. In some muslim countries, and now in britain and elsewhere, fathers and brothers sometimes engage in "honor killings" of their daughters if they dare choose their own husbands, dress like Westerners or listen to Western music. Anyone who submits this to hedonic calculus can see the disadvantage and the suffering this generates, and how unnecessary this suffering is. But they are called "honor killings" because there is a code of honor that somehow links the manhood of relatives to women being treated like children. Once again, ***if we lose sight of the end that our own nature seeks, all virtue comes to nothing*** and Polystratus says it degenerates into arrogance (fanaticism) and superstition. Without aligning our values with nature, with reality and with real world repercussions, there can be no virtue.
    Like · Reply · 4 · March 8 at 12:51pm

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey How do you get from Hellenistic virtues (which Epicurus adopted as a means to pleasure) to honour killings? Killing your relatives in recompense for perceived shame...i dont get the link. Sounds more like lunacy than philosophy.
    Like · Reply · March 8 at 1:55pm · Edited

    Hiram Crespo

    Hiram Crespo Well, these men think they are virtuous. Manhood is related to virtue for many, and in fact the particle vir relates to virility and virile. So notions of manhood, however antiquated, get tied up in what is meant. Virtue and honor, without a clear definition, can be misused by authoritarian religions and cultures, and the military also exploits these and patriotism. The key is that they have to be understood as means to pleasure. But that is not what is usually or necessarily meant in everyday conversation.
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 8 at 2:22pm · Edited

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey I don't see the resemblance. Hellenistic virtues are quite tightly defined, they are all forms of prudence really. Practical wisdom.
    Like · Reply · March 8 at 2:55pm

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey Izzat, honour, as seen in Pakistan, India and Bangladesh is something distinct, and not specific to any religious philosophy and certainly absent from the Hellenistic traditions.
    Like · Reply · March 8 at 2:59pm

    Hiram Crespo

    Hiram Crespo The problem we have is that we seek to have values aligned with nature and to avoid cultural corruption. So what does an Epicurean do with PD 5 in light of honor killings? We will always choose nature, that is, pleasure. And we have to mistrust people who define living honorably by culture.and not by nature. Nature is not Hellenistic, it s transcultural.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 8 at 3:38pm

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker "I say both now, and always, shouting out loudly, to all Greeks and non-Greeks, that pleasure is the highest end of life!" - D of O
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    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa What does mean do your DUTY according to an AUTHENTIC MORAL VIRTUE ?? Who is that person - as an authority - who could set to us what is our DUTY to go in line with an AUTHENTIC MORAL VIRTUE ? And what is the criterion in order to determine correctly THE DUTY and the VIRTUE in accordance to our nature and the social phenomena, such as they are evolving according to the whole Nature ?

    Example : If someone in the past, did adultery in Greece, the police caught him in "flagrante delito", wearing only his briefs because he did not live in accordance to an AUTHENTIC VIRTUE. Now this has been changed.


    How do you understand the whole issue you from the stoicism?? I would like to know better !! In an entire planet and in all these social systems and the phenomena, you do say that the human being is a rational moral being living in accordance to an authentic VIRTUE ? This is the GENERAL PICTURE you’ve got ?

    In this way you study the Nature rightly ??

    And the ISIS say, that they do their DUTY in accordance to an Authentic moral virtue !!

    And a christian priest of our parish, is telling us IF we do our DUTY and live in accordance to his AUTHENTIC VIRTUE, we will be good and having good souls...Frankly, I can’t hear the same things again and again.Image may contain: night and text

    Like · Reply · 2 · March 8 at 4:54pm · Edited

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey Elli, I agree with everything you say, however you are not describing any system of Hellenistic virtue ethics. Arete is personal, there is no system of rules or authority or judgement. Epicurus adhered to the same arete, and said happiness was impossible without it.
    Like · Reply · March 9 at 10:23am

    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa Jimmy, Nature is not any system is only the Nature. And when we study her with our senses we realize that all Nature's creatures pursue the pleasure and avoid pain. Virtues are already in my mind as prolepsis/anticipations or preconceptions. And I do...See More
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 9 at 11:37am

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey I am not sure why you keep coming back to authority, we are discussing arete https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=https%…KO58WB3DxmKDnn0

    Arete (moral virtue) - Wikipedia
    , this notion of excellence was ultimately bound up with the notion of the fulfillment of purpose…
    EN.WIKIPEDIA.ORG

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    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa Jimmy Daltrey Arete...eudaimonia... ataraxia... aponia and so on, well, IF you do not connect them with something pretty clear and a faculty given to you by Nature for your survival, and just for the purpose to live a pleasant life... then bit all these words farewell as empty of meaning.

    Since, Fg. 221. A philosopher's words are empty if they do not heal the suffering of the man. For just as medicine is useless if it does not remove sickness from the body, so philosophy is useless if it does not remove suffering from the soul. Epicurus.


    Ok arete... let's say the arete of justice as a preconception or anticipation that created through your experiences and their consequences, and still are created in your life. What was your criterion of truth to judge RIGHTLY who was fair and who was unfair in your life? Who is lying and who is not ? And which of his actions are beneficial or not beneficial for you ? How you judge all the things around you in accordance with Nature and you nature ? Please, do not say me of what makes me happy and what is not., because if you ask a donkey that is climbing a hill full loaded in his back, that donkey maybe would say to you that is extremely happy. 1f61b.png:P


    Frankly, I do not blame that donkey for that, since he does not examine who is saying lies and who is not, he does not study the Nature, he does not fear death, he does not know that one day will die. But if you load his back with a heavy load, yammering would say to you : Hey mister you actions were against my nature : I am not pleased....I pain (thrice I PAIN). and that poor creature will fall down in pains.


    But what I say now ? Epictetus when he was a slave, as they say, he was tortured by his master Epaphroditus who twisted his leg. Enduring the pain with complete composure, Epictetus warned Epaphroditus that his leg would break, and when it did break, he said, 'There, did I not tell you that it would break?'

    Well, frankly THIS IS NOT the arete of pride of the Greeks. This is not the pride of the Spartans and Leonidas who fought the persians for the purpose to win and live their children a free and pleasant life. This is not the self respect of a man who studies the Nature expressing his fellings of pleasure and pain. This is not greek philosophy !!! This is an oriental cunning!!! This is a philosophy for SLAVES who are under the heavy load of Fate and Destiny living in fully apathy. These are not free and dignity men who want to live pleasantly their life Full stop.
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    Cassius Amicus

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  • Definitions Of Key Greek Terms

    • Cassius
    • March 11, 2017 at 3:50 PM
    Elli Pensa

    March 9 at 10:54am

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    ɳɑʈɧɑɳ ɧɑɾɾʏ ɓɑɾʈɱɑɳ

    ɳɑʈɧɑɳ ɧɑɾɾʏ ɓɑɾʈɱɑɳ Elli, I have some background studying Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics, and I'm mostly familiar with the use of 'eudaimonia' (εὐδαιμονία) to describe the state of human excellence (which seems now to be an early precursor to virtue ethics). Within the context of Epicurean philosophy, would you suggest that 'eudaimonia' (εὐδαιμονία) and 'ataraxia' (ἀταραξία) are semantically synonymous? I understand that followers of Stoicism also make use of the word 'ataraxia' (ἀταραξία), but as a consequence of the pursuit of virtue, much like the Peripatetic and Platonic schools. Now that I'm looking at it, would we also suppose that 'aponia' (ἀπονία) is another semantic synonym?


    I also have a question about Epicurus' use of 'aretes' (ἀρετή) as "virtues, the means for the goal of pleasure." This description of virtue as a 'means' seems eerily similar to the usage in both Stoic and Platonic schools of thought (I also notice some similarity with Sextus Empiricus' Pyrrhonist Skepticism). I understand that the main difference between these other schools and Epicurus' ideas might be expressed as follows: (a) Epicurus' use of 'virtues' as a means to pursue tranquility, versus (b) pursuing virtue for it's own sake, with tranquility as an inconsequential side effect.


    When I look at it like this, it seems that 'tranquility' is actually the true goal of all schools, but that most schools besides Epicurus' seem to have mislead themselves into believing that they 'want' or 'desire' some abstract, impersonal ideals as oppose to (what I would suggest is their actual goal) a state of tranquility. If everything I've suggested thus far is accurate, then I'd also propose that Epicurean philosophy has simply been unfairly bastardized by the other schools, simply due to it's association (their misunderstanding) with Hedonism. Hell, the Hebrews went so far as to appropriate the word 'epikoros' (אפיקורוס) to refer to atheists, non-believers, or their 'Other.'
    Like · Reply · 4 · March 9 at 11:47am · Edited

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    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker I'm not fond of the use of tranquility, I think we have enough context from the extant remains to put that translation to bed, but otherwise that's a succinct analysis of the state of things. Bravo.
    Unlike · Reply · 3 · March 9 at 11:50am

    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa ɳɑʈɧɑɳ ɧɑɾɾʏ ɓɑɾʈɱɑɳ Excellent points. Tranquility is another descritpion of the goal and exist body and soul as we study the Nature properly. I did not understand what do you mean with the Hebrews. You mean that they went so far because maybe they did not like the goal as set by Nature and is that of pleasure ??
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 9 at 11:58am

    ɳɑʈɧɑɳ ɧɑɾɾʏ ɓɑɾʈɱɑɳ

    ɳɑʈɧɑɳ ɧɑɾɾʏ ɓɑɾʈɱɑɳ Yeah, you've got it! I understand that many ancient schools of thought, including religious traditions, looked down on the Epicureans, and misrepresented their philosophy. 'Epikoros' (אפיקורוס) is a good example within Judaism, because they associated Epicureans as strict atheists who rejected their deity as a result of (what they misunderstood to be) Epicurus' insistence on physical indulgence, which doesn't at all capture the nuance of Epicurean philosophy. It seems like these other schools see the goal of Epicurean philosophy as a form of perpetual masturbation. 1f61b.png:P


    Jason, I'm curious what the criticism is of 'tranquility' as a good translation. Is 'pleasure' the preferred translation?
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 9 at 12:05pm

    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa The whole thing that we have to understand is that the measurement on things is dynamic, and is as follows: Let’s see the attached picture. It concerns the Epicurean philosophy.

    The more the person is concerned with the study of Nature,

    the more he succeeds fearlessness,

    the more he uses the measurement of pain and pleasure.

    These two produce pleasure that belongs to the individual, (because pleasure belongs to the one who feels it, of course).

    At the same time, however, the person practices the art of self-sufficiency

    which is improved with the study of nature

    and the more one achieves self-sufficiency,

    the more freedom he acquires and thus greater the pleasure it provides to the individual.

    Let's not insist on completeness of the analysis (which anyway does not exist), but in the method.

    It includes the general picture. We can later move to the rest which are the multiple causes of human happiness. We can combine the rest. Then, we are going to see what emerges from the composition of the rest. In a more compound form we will observe the rebound and feedback. The more this process provides pleasure to a person, the greater the desire to study the Nature. The system does not use the law of excluded middle, i.e. pleasure or no pleasure, fearlessness or not fearlessness etc, but uses the Epicurean Multi-valued logic where the above causes constantly get different values depending on the decisions and our actions. Imagine, for example, that I give great importance to the fearlessness and succeed pleasure from there, but I give little importance to self-sufficiency. So, depending on the general activity at a certain time, one cause will affect the other continuously taking different values and all the separate data will pulsate and will affect one another until the system settles and perhaps I wish that calmness means Katastematic pleasure of the individual. The system is dynamic, it is evolving like the nature and covers the needs of the Epicurean philosophy, which observes things as they proceed and as Diogenes of Oenoanda writes (in response to Peripatetics) this flow, flowing as he says, can be scrolled quickly but not so fast as not to conceive a situation of it.

    (An excerpt on the issue entitled : “The crisis and the epicurean reasoning” by Γεώργιος Καπλάνης, founding member in the Garden of Thessaloniki.Image may contain: 1 person

    Like · Reply · 1 · March 9 at 12:12pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus I will second Jason's comment. To the extent we are talking about an English word that has a common meaning, "tranquility' as a statement of the Epicurean goal seems woefully understated. Now, to the extent that someone assigns a technical definition to the word "tranquility" that explicitly conveys other core information, such as the description ofthe highest life contained in Torquatus and discussed here recently, then so be it. But to the extent that the English meaning of "tranquility' is essentially "calm" then it is not just insuffcient, but woefully insufficient, to describe what Epicurus said. Now if someone wants to assert that the goal of stoicism is tranquility, I would not object, but even there it is probably much too narrow.
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 9 at 12:19pm

    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa ɳɑʈɧɑɳ ɧɑɾɾʏ ɓɑɾʈɱɑɳ tranquility is synonym with the calmness and is a description of the goal of pleasure.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 9 at 12:20pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Elli when you say "a description of the goal of pleasure" I am concerned that this formulation has the same problem as attempting to define "yellow" separately from "things that are yellow." I don't think calmness is itself something that exists apart...See More
    Like · Reply · 3 · March 9 at 12:27pm · Edited

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker ɳɑʈɧɑɳ, I think that both English words (tranquility and pleasure) are too abrupt and don't convey the meaning originally intended. I think that any translation of ataraxia, aponia, arete, is going to be several words, if not sentences, in length in order to capture the full meaning outside of the context of the whole (small-c) canon.


    Epicureans were derided for using so-called "novel" definitions of common words. I don't think they were novel, but that they weren't understood properly even in antiquity outside of the context within which they were used. Elli hints at that with the multivalent logic discussion.


    This is a good argument for describing Epicurean Gardens as initiatory organizations.
    Unlike · Reply · 3 · March 9 at 12:29pm · Edited

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker Tranquility doesn't effectively convey the "undisturbed experience of pleasure" that I think ataraxia refers to.
    Unlike · Reply · 3 · March 9 at 12:28pm · Edited

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Another way of looking at it: Is it not proper to look at a mouse at rest and say that it is tranquil? Putting aside all the many issues arising from comparing mice to men, "calmness" alone surely cannot be considered sufficient to convey the goal of a life which has pleasure as its guide.
    Like · Reply · 3 · March 9 at 12:30pm · Edited

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Just to make it available readily, this is the same issue Edith Porter Packer was struggling with in her "Cicero's Presentation of Epicurean Ethics." NHB raises a very real issue that must be dealt with precisely in considering the role of tranqility....See MoreImage may contain: text

    Like · Reply · 2 · March 9 at 12:34pm · Edited

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus And ɳɑʈɧɑɳ ɧɑɾɾʏ ɓɑɾʈɱɑɳ let me be quick to be clear that I do not mean to be critical of you personally in these comments. You are raising what is I think probably THE most important question in practical application of Epicurean philosophy, and I am glad you raise it in the articulate manner that you do!
    Like · Reply · 3 · March 9 at 12:37pm

    ɳɑʈɧɑɳ ɧɑɾɾʏ ɓɑɾʈɱɑɳ

    ɳɑʈɧɑɳ ɧɑɾɾʏ ɓɑɾʈɱɑɳ I appreciate you clarity, Cassius, as well as your critical analysis! I'm glad we're getting to the meat of the issue, because this helps me refine my own understanding of the text.


    I think I see what you mean. While 'tranquility' captures an piece of...See More
    Like · Reply · March 9 at 3:24pm

    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa IMO ɳɑʈɧɑɳ ɧɑɾɾʏ ɓɑɾʈɱɑɳ tranquility as a term IS NOT the absence of something else. Let's see Epicurus what says on tranquility or calmness : «παρεγγυῶν τὸ συνεχὲς ἐνέργημα ἐν φυσιολογίᾳ καί τοιούτῳ μάλιστα ἐγγαληνίζων τῷ βίῳ» (“I recommend constant activity in the study of nature and this way more than any other I bring calm to my life”) For this purpose, he introduced Κανονικὸν (Canonikon), an empirical methodology of inquiry consisting of observation by the senses and drawing inferences for the unknown based on analogies with the observed. This approach made Epicurean philosophy very comprehensive and among all ancient philosophies by far the most compatible with modern scientific findings.====> Thus, we read that the #constant #activity in the study of Nature makes the person to be "εναγγαλίζων" calm, serene, tranquil, because with this way he adhieves the goal of the pure pleasure !! 1f642.png:)PD 12. It is impossible for someone to dispel his fears about the most important matters if he doesn't know the nature of the Universe but still gives some credence to myths. So without the study of nature there is no enjoyment of pure pleasure.
    Unlike · Reply · 1 · March 9 at 3:58pm

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker How is this Elli?


    Constant use of Canonics without disturbance from false opinion allows the enjoyment of pleasure unmixed.


    Too unwieldy? It seems clear to me but I'm used to stilted language with my study of Early Modern English texts.
    Unlike · Reply · 3 · March 9 at 4:12pm

    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa Excellent Jason LIKE.png(y) Constant use of Canonics without disturbance from groundles opinions and empty beliefs allows the enjoyment of pleasure unmixed. That goes like a poem ! 1f609.png;)
    Unlike · Reply · 3 · March 9 at 4:22pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus ɳɑʈɧɑɳ ɧɑɾɾʏ ɓɑɾʈɱɑɳ yes I think you are moving in the right direction but I still have issues. As I was driving for the last couple of hours one of the thoughts I had in general was this: I believe it is very poor practice to use a foreign language word without translation, because to use the foreign language one in another language implies that the word CANNOT be translated, or is so complicated to translate that it is not worthwhile. I believe all of these words have ready English equivalents because at the deep level we are talking about, nature made the issues readily graspable, as they are descriptions of our experiences that all of us share (on the order Epicurus' observation that pleasure needs no defense because we perceive it - in the same way that we perceive that sugar is sweet and snow is white - the issue is not complex).


    Of course I say that not having been trained in a word of Greek, and only a few of Latin, but i take as my example Lucretius who to my knowledge did not use Greek words for these issues.


    I believe ataraxia translates to nothing more complex than "calmnness", or "a condition absent disturbance," which is just two ways of saying the same thing.


    I believe aponia translates to nothing more complex than "without pain", which because of the Epicurean observation that pleasure and pain are the only two feelings, means nothing more than a condition in which the living being is experiencing nothing but pleasure, without any pain.


    I believe it is prejudging the issue and reading into it our own predispositions to consider the untranslated word "ataraxia," (which is the word most people like to throw around), as a difficult to understand complex concept which only by deep study into Epicurus is understandable. But that is exactly what is often done, and in my view that is damaging.


    Epicurus and Lucretius make clear that the faculty of pleasure is the guide to how to live, and successfully following that guide means nothing more than living pleasurably as ordinary mortals understand that. We can embellish that position all we want to with implications that he is describing some equivalent to salvation or to "virtue" in the stoic sage sense, but I contend that the texts read as whole do not justify that conclusion.


    Over a lifetime we want to experience as much pleasure as possible, and we want to do that calmly and continuously and without gaps (the ataraxia reference) and we want to do it with as little pain mixed in as possible (the aponia reference, which means pure pleasure). What Stoics so frequently do is to take the tools and make them the end, and it is a parallel problem to take the adverbs (calmly and purely) out of context and elevate them to focus of attention, the exclusion of the foundation references of experiencing pleasure and avoiding pain, which is what the adverbs are modifying in the first place.


    So in your last post you have largely done the same thing - you are describing the Epicurean goal of life without mentioning pleasure and pain!


    Again I think a part of the problem here arises from the prejudice that the word "pleasure" carrries. We are not taking about cake, pies, and sex - at least, not JUST about cake pies and sex. We are talking about the faculty of pleasure, which really means pleasurable feelings arising from ANY activity - yes sex, but also friendship, and music, and contemplation of the universe - and philosophic discussion as we are doing now. We should not be shrinking back from doing exactly what Epicurus did - We should name PLEASURE as the goal of living regardless of what the prudes and the hypocrites say (but rarely apply o themselves in private). Pleasure is not cakes and pies, pleasure is the faculty that Nature gave us to order our lives and tell us what to do with those lives. To substitute ANY other term and description is to evade the issue and in my review to rebel against nature's guidance. So in my view it is Epicureans who truly follow nature, and Stoics and other philosophers who are the true decadents.
    Like · Reply · 4 · March 9 at 7:44pm · Edited

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Here is another thought I had while driving tonight. One of the passages that I have always considered most striking is the end of the Torquatus monologue where Torquatus says that we should be ashamed that we have not learned these basic truths, as E...See More
    Like · Reply · 4 · March 9 at 7:52pm · Edited

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus One last thought for this sequence: Another thing I think is going on is that people are programmed to be looking for "the goal" (the relates to DeWitt's summum bonum argument too, I think). If we are religious we tend to think of the goal of life is to "do what god wants us to do" - and due to the very helpful priestly class, we all have a general idea that god wants us all to do basically the same thing (be holy while supporting the priestly class).


    If we are Stoic or mainstream philosophers, we believe the general goal is to "be virtuous" and we all have a general idea that that means to be courageous, strong, rational, etc., which might sound fairly broad but translates into being a cross between Mr. Spock and Mother Teresa - pretty easy to define.


    However if we are Epicurean we are told that "pleasure is the guide of life" - but we all know that there are innumerable things that are pleasurable to us, and that does not sound like a discrete and well-defined enough goal. And that is where a lot of the problem arises, because that faculty of pleasure (and its opposite pain) is what nature gave us, and nature didn't tell us specific places to find that pleasure, except between very wide limits.


    And resistance to that idea that "pleasure is the guide" is wide and deep. Ha - I think about the videos about Epicurus I see on the internet, and if you watch them you might think that Epicurus set up his Garden in Athens solely so he could say "Don't fall for advertising and commercialism in the 21st century." Sure, it is important to Epicurean doctrine that we adjust our desires to our means, and that we not seek to overshoot our capacities so that we end up disappointed unnecessarily. But that's just another observation / adverb / guideline like avoiding political careers, or avoiding seeking fame as one's primary goal. It is a good idea not to be overly "greedy" for material things because if you set that as a priority you will very likely cause yourself all sorts of problems. But "avoiding being greedy" is not the goal of life! The goal of life is always to live pleasurably, and that is why Epicurus advised against living too luxuriously but also advised against living too frugally. The target is always pleasant living under the circumstances, and circumstances vary tremendously.


    Which takes me back to the first observation - saying "pleasure is the guide of life" is not a copout, and it's not a poor sister to the admirable goals of living godly or living virtuously. It's simply a recognition that nature has given you many different options in how you might live pleasurably, and that Epicurus was smart enough not to fall for the Stoic/Platonic error of trying to dictate to Nature how we "should have been" created.


    Here we cue the Nietzsche "Fraud of Words" passage again to let him drill home how ridiculous it is for us to try to dictate to Nature the rules that WE think should govern, rather than simply look to what Nature has actually given us.
    Like · Reply · 3 · March 9 at 8:44pm · Edited

    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa Cassius Amicus When sometimes I say the philosopher is a philosopher during 24 hours a day and even when he writes some memos giving them in the laundry for cleaning his clothes, I speak seriously. This is to say that a philosopher is a teacher and has to apply in practice all of his teachings in his own life inspiring his pupils to preserve all their first principles. Some would say now that what I would say is ad hominem argument, but I have to say that : What the heck we will learn from stoic teachers e.g. Zeno that he went to his death struggling himself and the other Epictetus that was a slave the most of his life ?To not mention the stoic teacher Cleanthis that took the stoic philosophy and made it as it was : a paralyzed theology, when we read in his prayer and that :


    Most glorious of immortals, Zeus

    The many named, almighty evermore,

    Nature's great Sovereign, ruling all by law

    Hail to thee! On thee 'tis meet and right


    That mortals everywhere should call.

    From thee was our begetting; ours alone

    Of all that live and move upon the earth

    The lot to bear God's likeness.

    Thee will I ever chant, thy power praise!


    For thee this whole vast cosmos, wheeling round

    The earth, obeys, and where thou leadest

    It follows, ruled willingly by thee.

    In thy unconquerable hands thou holdest fast,

    Ready prepared, that two-timed flaming blast,

    The ever-living thunderbolt:

    Nature's own stroke brings all things to their end.

    By it thou guidest aright the sense instinct

    Which spreads through all things, mingled even

    With stars in heaven, the great and small-

    Thou who art King supreme for evermore!


    Naught upon earth is wrought in thy despite, oh God.

    Nor in the ethereal sphere aloft which ever winds

    About its pole, nor in the sea-save only what

    The wicked work, in their strange madness,

    Yet even so, thou knowest to make the crooked straight.

    Prune all excess, give order to the orderless,

    For unto thee the unloved still is lovely-

    And thus in one all things are harmonized,

    The evil with the good, that so one Word

    Should be in all things everlastingly.


    One Word-which evermore the wicked flee!

    Ill-fated, hungering to possess the good

    They have no vision of God's universal law,

    Nor will they hear, though if obedient in mind

    They might obtain a noble life, true wealth.

    Instead they rush unthinking after ill:

    Some with a shameless zeal for fame,

    Others pursuing gain, disorderly;

    Still others folly, or pleasures of the flesh.

    [But evils are their lot] and other times

    Bring other harvests, all unsought-

    For all their great desire, its opposite!


    But, Zeus, thou giver of every gift,

    Who dwellest within the dark clouds, wielding still

    The flashing stroke of lightning, save, we pray,

    Thy children from this boundless misery.

    Scatter, Oh Father, the darkness from their souls,

    Grant them to find true understanding

    On which relying thou justly rulest all-

    While we, thus honoured, in turn will honour thee,

    Hymning thy works forever, as is meet

    For mortals while no greater right

    Belongs even to the gods than evermore

    Justly to praise the universal law! :


    Oh, this is theology indeed. This leads to the religion indeed. This leads to the confusion indeed. This is against the Nature of all the Things, indeed. 1f61b.png:P
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · Yesterday at 5:58am · Edited

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Jason Baker I think you were rephrasing what Elli was saying and this works well for me "Constant use of Canonics without disturbance from false opinion allows the enjoyment of pleasure unmixed." I think this is correct as far as it goes. Just a mental note though - I get the impression that people think results are / should be guaranteed (like a christian who confesses goes to heaven automatically). And I think it is appropriate to regularly point out that Epicurean philosophy is not magic. We can't do an incantation and be happy. (But wait! isn't that what this mysterious "ataraxia" is, I can hear them say!) (And, didn't Epicurus say that a person who lives virtuously will automatically be happy? I am virtuous; why aren't I happy??)


    So as I read that I mentally note "Constant use of Canonics without disturbance from false opinion allows the OPPORTUNITY for enjoyment of pleasure unmixed." Because sometimes if the Persians are streaming across the penninsula then no amount of perceptive thinking alone will keep an Athenian happy when the Persians arrive. Maybe this observation I am making is so obvious that it doesn't need to be made, but I get the impression a lot of people coming to philosophy groups are coming with thoroughly messed up lives and looking for instant relief (thus the appeal of Stoicism/anesthesia). They don't realize (or don't want to admit) that ACTION is frequently (always?) necessary to implement Epicurean philosophy and live pleasantly too.
    Like · Reply · 1 · Yesterday at 8:48am · Edited

    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa <<Because sometimes if the Persians are streaming across the penninsula then no amount of perceptive thinking alone will keep an Athenian happy when the Persians arrive. Maybe this observation I am making is so obvious that it doesn't need to be made>>.


    Sorry Cassius my friend 1f642.png:) I won't agree with you on that concerning the Canon which is an excellent tool for a perceptive thinking in all the issues of our life indeed. What do you think made the Athenians or the Spartans and what made the good ancient greek Generals to win the battles with the numerous soldiers of the Persians? The strategic and perceptive thinking of the Canon :

    1) Study of Nature with the Senses looking and searching what is right space to line up.

    2) Anticipations or preconceptions based on past and present experiences how the persians used to fight and what was their wicked point-

    3) Sober calculation when is the right moment of the opportunity to attack because here is the struggle for all the things..The calculation was also among pleausure and pain. as they had had to chose a pain for the purpose of a future pleasure for all. 1f609.png;)


    Here is a small expert of Epicurus how he uses the strategic thinking of the Canon :


    “You will attempt something only when you can attempt it in appropriate circumstances and in the appropriate opportunity. But when comes the right opportunity, you be ready to grab it....", "When you contemplating the fleeing is prohibited to stay empty-handed ... there is a hope for a way out even in the most difficult situations, if not in too great a hurry before the time, nor too dilatory when the time arrives…” From epistle to Idomeneus, on The Urgent Need for Action (Seneca’s Letters – Book I – Letter XXII).
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · Yesterday at 9:16am

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus I agree with you Elli! The Canon tells us to ACT! But don't you think a good number of people studying philosophy are simply wanting to live the life of contemplation as if that is the highest and best and really all we have to do? 1f642.png:) I think they need constant reminders how impractical that is....
    Like · Reply · 2 · Yesterday at 9:23am · Edited

    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa There are many tools in our life but always it depends on how we use them. Contemplation with the belief that the goddess Athena who was a symbol of a strategic thinking IS the one that she will help you in crucial moments, is a faitytale for the little children. Nature gave us all the faculties to survive and the tools are in our hands...but as I said before it depends on how we use them. The same is with the philosophy of HOW we can apply it in the life according to the reality of Nature. The goal is survival, but what kind of survival is the case. Pressure your emotions and waiting your destiny or measuring with the natural purpose to live as a human being.wth the proper connection with other human beings ? The conclusion is only this : We can't make social contracts with all the people on this planet Earth. And as Diogenis of Oinoanda says : Those men who hold that this world was created uniquely by the gods, as a place for the gods to live, of course have no answer to this question. By their view, the gods were destitute and roaming about at random for an infinite time before the creation of this world, like an unfortunate man, without a country, who had neither city nor fellow citizens! It is absurd to argue that a divine nature created the world for the sake of the world itself, and it is even more absurd to argue that the gods created men for the gods’ own sake. There are too many things wrong, with both the world and with men, for them to have been created by gods!


    Let us now turn our attention from gods to men.


    Many men pursue philosophy for the sake of wealth and power, with the aim of procuring these either from private individuals, or from kings, who deem philosophy to be a great and precious possession.


    Well, it is not in order to gain wealth or power that we Epicureans pursue philosophy! We pursue philosophy so that we may enjoy happiness through attainment of the goal craved by Nature.


    But know this also: We Epicureans bring these truths, not to all men whatsoever, but only to those men who are benevolent and capable of receiving this wisdom.
    Unlike · Reply · 4 · Yesterday at 9:46am · Edited

  • Would Epicurus Say That Epictetus (A "Virtuous Man") lived a pleasant life?

    • Cassius
    • March 11, 2017 at 3:46 PM
    Cassius Amicus

    Yesterday at 9:00am

    Let's suppose one of our Stoic acquaintances walks into the room and suggests to us that Epictetus was one of the most virtuous men who ever lived. And let's say our Stoic also quoted to us the wording of PD5 (translated below by Cyril Bailey; alternate translations follow below). Question: Would our Stoic be right in suggesting to us that Epicurus would have said that Epictetus had lived pleasantly?

    "It is not possible to live pleasantly without living prudently and honorably and justly, [nor again to live a life of prudence, honor, and Justice] without living pleasantly. And the man who does not possess the pleasant life, is not living prudently and honorably and justly, [and the man who does not possess the virtuous life], cannot possibly live pleasantly."

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    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus One point of clarififcation - it appears to be Bailey who uses the word "virtuous" in the parenthetical expression near the end. Other translators do not use that term.


    Epicurus Wiki: "It is impossible to live pleasantly without living prudently and honorably and justly, and it is impossible to live prudently and honorably and justly without living pleasantly. Whenever any one of these is lacking (when, for instance, one is not able to live wisely, though he lives honorably and justly) it is impossible for him to live a pleasant life."
    Like · Reply · 1 · Yesterday at 9:06am · Edited

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus This is the HICKS version -https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=https%…aFULVtLZJhX-6D4Image may contain: text

    Like · Reply · 2 · Yesterday at 9:09am · Edited

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus CD Yonge versionhttps://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=https%…EQlBRM_85pJR4C0Image may contain: text

    Like · Reply · Yesterday at 9:10am

    Cassius Amicus

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    Ron Warrick

    Ron Warrick You say he quotes PD 5. Are we to assume he endorses it also?
    Like · Reply · Yesterday at 9:03am

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus For purposes of this hypothetical let's presume that the Stoic simply asserts that the clear meaning of PD5 is that the man leading a virtuous life must necessarily be living pleasantly. Since stoics are masters of dialectical gamesmanship I would never presume that a true Stoic (eg- Seneca) is being sincere with a question like that.
    Like · Reply · 1 · Yesterday at 9:09am · Edited

    Ilkka Vuoristo

    Ilkka Vuoristo 1f603.png:D
    Like · Reply · Yesterday at 10:43am

    Ron Warrick

    Ron Warrick Cassius Amicus I can't see a Stoic saying that. If a passage has two claims, he wouldn't say the meaning of the passage is just the one claim, unless the one claim implied the other, which it doesn't in this case. Even the Stoics were not that faulty in their logic.
    Unlike · Reply · 1 · Yesterday at 10:48am · Edited

    Cassius Amicus

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    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker I would tell our stoic friend to stick to his own criteria and not play games. Epicurus preceded Epictetus by some three hundred plus years. It's like asking what Voltaire would have thought of any of us. It's a vain fantasy. I grow weary of vain fantasies. Hypotheticals should be shut down immediately, they serve to illustrate very little about the scenario but a lot about the person posing the question.
    Like · Reply · 1 · Yesterday at 9:57am

    Bartosz Morzynski

    Bartosz Morzynski Not sure if getting angry at hypothetical Stoic or at Cassius for posting that hypothetical scenario.
    Like · Reply · 17 hrs

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker It does read angry, doesn't it? Not my intent at all.
    Like · Reply · 16 hrs

    Cassius Amicus

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    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Well in this case Jason I think the hypothetical has a useful point and will lead to some interesting discussion. We can substitute anyone else who is reputed to be virtuous, but the key is that whoever we are talking about is simply considered to be extremely virtuous, at least as that term is ordinarily understood by most ordinary people who are not applying a special definition to the word "virtue"
    Like · Reply · 1 · Yesterday at 10:16am · Edited

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey Not sure if I get the question, both Epictetus and Epicurus would hold that virtue (arete) and eudaemonia are symbiotically linked. The difference being that the Stoics thought pleasure to be a baser goal than living in accordance with one's rational nature.
    Like · Reply · Yesterday at 10:41am

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey Epictetus does say that the Epicureans are good people following a bad philosophy, whereas Stoics are bad people following a good philosophy...rather cryptic...he doesn't claim to be a sage.
    Like · Reply · Yesterday at 10:43am

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus So Jimmy Daltrey (or anyone else) the question is, considering PD5, would Epicurus had held that Epictetus (as a paragon of virtue) had lived a pleasant life?
    Like · Reply · Yesterday at 10:52am

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    Ron Warrick

    Ron Warrick Epictetus denied he was a sage, meaning he was not 100% virtuous. So, it is not clear whether he would have had a pleasant life or not. It would be a psychological matter of how he viewed his imperfection, I think.
    Like · Reply · 1 · Yesterday at 10:54am

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey I would think so. If pleasure is inner peace in the face of adversity, yes. (with the caveat that no Stoic ever claimed to be truly virtuous, just doing their best to head in that direction, there has never been a sage)
    Like · Reply · Yesterday at 10:57am · Edited

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus OK there you guys are taking a specialist (Stoic) interpretation of virtue and saying that even Epictetus did not think he was virtuous. That sounds like correct reasoning to me, but it takes the practical use out of talking about living virtuously if...See More
    Like · Reply · 1 · Yesterday at 10:59am · Edited

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey There is no "specialist" definition of Hellenistic virtue/arete. It is shared by every ancient philosophy, Stoic, Epicurean, Platonist alike. Wisdom, prudence, courage, justice, moderation.
    Like · Reply · Yesterday at 11:05am · Edited

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey Perfection is what is impossible to achieve. One can try to be wise on a case by case basis.
    Like · Reply · Yesterday at 11:03am

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey The Christians added "faith hope and charity, which confuses people and causes them to conflate Greek sagacity with Jihadis and the Spanish Inquisition.
    Like · Reply · Yesterday at 11:06am

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey Are the prudent happier than the rash? Probably.
    Like · Reply · Yesterday at 11:07am

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey Are the courageous happier than the fearful? Definitely.
    Like · Reply · Yesterday at 11:08am

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey Are the wise happier than the foolish? Probably.
    Like · Reply · Yesterday at 11:09am

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey Are the just happier than the unjust? Sadly, I doubt it, but maybe.
    Like · Reply · Yesterday at 11:09am

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey Is it better to be foolish than wise? No...
    Like · Reply · Yesterday at 11:11am

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Just trying to bring this down to real life Jimmy Daltrey. Talking philosophy makes no sense if it is not of practical value to living. Epictetus is just being used as an example. The question before the house is: Does PD5 mean that Epicurus would say that everyone who lives by the definition you state to be "shared by every ancient philosophy. Wisdom, prudence, courage, justice, moderation]" living pleasantly? If not, why not? If more information is needed before answering, what else needs to be known?
    Like · Reply · 1 · Yesterday at 11:17am

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey I think Epicurus would say to live philosophically, to live virtuously is to live pleasantly.
    Like · Reply · Yesterday at 12:20pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus " to live virtuously is to live pleasantly." << That is exactly the conclusion that I think a lot of people draw from PD5, and that is exactly what I intend to question with the hypothetical. By most any common definition Epictetus would probably be thought by many people to have lived virtuously. Would Epicurus agree that Epictetus lived virtuously? From that perspective would Epicurus also agree that Epictetus lived pleasantly? I do not think that either of those questions is obviously answered "yes"
    Like · Reply · Yesterday at 1:14pm

    Cassius Amicus

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    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Or to ask the question another way, is an Epicurean bound by PD5 to conclude that anyone living virtuously is living pleasantly? If not, what are the limitations and why not conclude that?
    Like · Reply · 1 · Yesterday at 10:53am

    Ilkka Vuoristo

    Ilkka Vuoristo If it were actually true that someone was living a virtuous, then they would be living a pleasant life. But it would be impossible for us to say, that a single person is _actually_ virtuous. They might be hiding vice from us.
    Unlike · Reply · 4 · Yesterday at 10:56am

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Yep - hiding vice, and also, once again, do we really have any definition of what it means to live virtuously? And if we do try to define "living virtuously" the more specific we get about it without talking about pleasure, the further we get from the ability to conclude that whatever we are talking about is pleasant living.
    Like · Reply · 2 · Yesterday at 11:01am

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey The Stoics would hold that personal integrity would trump pleasure. If given the choice between bowing to a tyrant or death, the ideal Stoic would take death. So there is a big gap there.
    Like · Reply · Yesterday at 12:22pm

    Ilkka Vuoristo

    Ilkka Vuoristo We have a pretty good definition of virtuous living in the PD 5. We can define what such a life is, but not say that any particular life is like that. Most definitions are the ideal cases, and most particulars fail at some detail of the definition. Life isn't easy to cram into convenient boxes.


    And, yes, if we are talking about virtues without talking about pleasure, we've gone astray. Principal Doctrine 25 reminds us that "If you do not on every separate occasion refer each of your actions to the end prescribed by nature, but instead of this in the act of choice or avoidance swerve aside to some other end, your acts will not be consistent with your theories."


    Virtues are actions, not empty words. Things that lead to death are _vices_.
    Unlike · Reply · 1 · Yesterday at 12:34pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Ilkka Vuoristo your last post raises another point I think is relevant here. The list of qualities in PD5 seems to be at most prudently, honorably, justly. As Jimmy Daltrey has listed earlier in that thread, the classic list of "virtues" is considerably longer than that, and at least in regard to justice, we know that Epicurus' definition of justice is almost the opposite of the common definition of justice. I think it is entirely possible that Epicurus did not intend this list, which the Epicurus wiki suggests is just a subset of prudence, to be synonymous with "virtue" at all.
    Like · Reply · Yesterday at 1:17pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Note from Epicurus.wiki that maybe this is not a broad reference to "virtue" but maybe all PD5 refers to is prudence:Image may contain: text

    Like · Reply · Yesterday at 1:19pm · Edited

    Cassius Amicus

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    Ilkka Vuoristo

    Ilkka Vuoristo I would say that it's not right to make such a suggestion.


    It would be impossible for anyone (Epicurean or not) to say that a single person is living virtuously or pleasantly. We have to also remember that Epicurus is talking about the virtues in the context of Epicurean Philosophy... and in that context Epictetus wasn't "prudent".
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · Yesterday at 10:53am

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Yes Ilkka Vuoristo, that is exactly where I am going. And yet I regularly see PD5 used as if it were totally clear that Epicurus endorsed virtuous living in the same way the Stoics did, and that because virtuous living leads to pleasure there is no reason to worry about distinctions between the goal of living between the two philosophies.
    Like · Reply · 1 · Yesterday at 10:55am

    Ilkka Vuoristo

    Ilkka Vuoristo When I see that I laugh and laugh and laugh and laugh and laugh... And then go do something pleasurable. 1f603.png:D
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · Yesterday at 12:35pm

    Ron Warrick

    Ron Warrick At some point we'll be challenged as to why it is necessary to live pleasantly in order to live wisely, honorably and justly. Frankly, I've not been able to make that connection to my satisfaction, and haven't seen it discussed anywhere.
    Like · Reply · Yesterday at 12:42pm


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    Cassius Amicus

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    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa The moralist stoic translators put words in the mouth of Epicurus.


    I have translated from the webpage of the greek gardens based on the ancient greek prototype text.


    V.(5) Οὐκ ἔστιν ἡδέως ζῆν ἄνευ τοῦ φρονίμως καὶ καλῶς καὶ δικαίως, <οὐδὲ φρονίμως καὶ καλῶς καὶ δικαίως> ἄνευ τοῦ ἡδέως. ὅτῳ δὲ τοῦτο μὴ ὑπάρχει ἐξ οὗ ζῆν φρονίμως, καὶ καλῶς καὶ δικαίως ὑπάρχει, οὐκ ἔστι τοῦτον ἡδέως ζῆν.


    new greek V.(5) Δεν ζει κανείς ηδονικά δίχως φρόνηση, ομορφιά και δικαιοσύνη, ούτε δίχως την ηδονή μπορεί κανείς να ζει με φρόνηση, ομορφιά και δικαιοσύνη. Όταν δεν υπάρχει αυτό, δεν υπάρχει ηδονική ζωή.


    V. (5) No one lives pleasantly without prudence, beauty and justice neither without the pleasure one can live with prudence, beauty and justice. When there is not this, there is not a pleasant life.


    Where did all the translators find the word honor and honorably in this PD 5 ? In the greek language for this word honest the adjective is έντιμος or the adverb <εντιμότητα> or the other word adj <ειλικρινής> or the adv. <ειλικρινώς> ?


    But Epicurus used the word <καλῶς> which means beautiful or nice.


    Cassius my friend, if you remember in our first correspondence that we've exchanged with emails, we had the same discussion on this issue. But think now again HOW MUCH pleasure brings the beauty of the Cosmos (means jewel) when you study the Nature or the presence of a sweet form ? Why Epicurus to be so moralist to use in this PD another word like honor ? I found in the lexicon that in the vocabulary of the UK: and the US honour is also a virtue and is also connected with virginity, purity substances 1f61b.png:P

    Is this word "honest" seems to be unecessary when you said already that one man has to be prudent and just to pursue the goal of pleasure? Is a prudent and a just man and honor too or not ?

    All the evidence how the greeks admire the beauty of the reality and Nature is all in their statues and in that word "Cosmos".

    And even this word "statue" for them was "agalma" from the verb "agallomai" means I feel joy and pleasure when I stare this form/figure infront of me. LIKE.png(Y)
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · Yesterday at 2:50pm · Edited

    Ron Warrick

    Ron Warrick In English, honorable is not quite the same as "honest".

    I don't see "ομορφιά" in the ancient Greek version above.
    Like · Reply · Yesterday at 1:11pm

    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa Μr.Ron Warrick You do not see in the ancient greek prototype the new greek word for "ομορφιά". But I can see this word in both texts, because I am an Hellene epicurean lady 1f603.png:D .
    Like · Reply · 2 · Yesterday at 1:25pm · Edited

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Every time I go through all these textual problems I shudder at the concern that so little of the modern translations/commentaries can be trusted without scrutiny. At least in the time of Cicero he would be aware that there were many orthodox Epicureans around to correct him, and there would be some restraint on how far he might go. In the last 500+ years there has been virtually no restraint, and a great deal of incentive, to read "virtue" and other Stoic ideas into every line of Epicurean text. To which the only antidote I have is to point out how illogical it is for modern commentators to imply that these views are reconcilable when the ancients who knew the material far better took the position (and very heatedly) that they were NOT reconcilable
    Like · Reply · 2 · Yesterday at 1:28pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus But if the principles of Epicurean philosophy are really as simple, and really derived so clearly from Nature as was alleged, then it ought to be very possible to reconstruct them with confidence, which I think is what we are doing.
    Like · Reply · 1 · Yesterday at 1:29pm

    Ron Warrick

    Ron Warrick Check out this refutation of the Stoics on this point.

    https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=http%3…3LJVDXiLnso3dqE

    Peace and Safety For Your Twentieth of October – Lorenzo Valla Sides With…
    NEWEPICUREAN.COM

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    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Yep, for example - … [Y]ou Stoics, unhappy and inflexible as you are, desire that nothing should exist that is not wicked and vile; you measure everything by a hollow wisdom that is in all respects fixed and complete. Thus, while you take joy in flying prodigiously and in striving toward the higher regions, your wings melt (not being natural to you but artificial and made of wax), and like the foolish Icarus [who flew too close to the sun] you fall into the sea. Truly, what kind of farfetched subtlety is it to describe the wise man in such a way that, by your own admission, no example can be found among us men, and to declare that he alone is happy, that he alone is friendly, good, and free? I would gladly endure this if your law did not deem that anyone who is not a wise man is by necessity a fool, a reprobate, an exile, an enemy, and a deserter, ‘anyone’ meaning all of us, since no one has yet possessed this wisdom. And lest by chance someone could become wise, you barbarians have made vices more numerous than virtues, and have invented an infinity of the most minute kinds of sins so that there are not more diseases of the body, which you say are hardly known adequately by the doctors themselves. If only one of these maladies were to affect the body, its health would not be completely lost; but if even a minimal spiritual evil exists in a man (as is necessarily the case), you pretend not only that this man incompletely lacks the honor belonging to wisdom but that he is also deformed by every shame and infamy. By Hercules, it is amazing that, when the doctors say there is one state of health and many illnesses, you do not also affirm that virtue is also single, although this is the same as declaring that whoever has one virtue possesses them all.
    Like · Reply · 2 · Yesterday at 2:28pm

    Cassius Amicus

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    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa I have the evidence =====> From the Liddell & Scott the adv. "καλῶς" as used by Epicurus in PD5 derives from the adj."καλός" means good looking, handsome, and for woman is «καλή» means beautiful. In Latin "pulcher". According to Homer as a feature of the external form. Other meanings good body, good physique, according to Homer in Odysseia.; Similarly with the “Callistus”, the most beautiful in body in Xenοphon.; Kalon means beauty in Euripides. In Xenophon and Plato as the Latin “praeclarus” wonderful, brilliant, kindness.

    =============================================

    And now according to CICERO !!!!! 1f61b.png:P 1f61b.png:P “Kαλός” means : the good person, the moral beauty, the virtue, contrary to the obscene, the indecent, (the honestum and turpe of Cicero).
    Like · Reply · 1 · Yesterday at 2:30pm · Edited

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    Ron Warrick

    Ron Warrick That's Cicero's platonism showing.
    Unlike · Reply · 1 · Yesterday at 2:38pm

    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa No, Cicero was not only a Platonist, he was a dangerous mixture of a platonist and a stoic too ! Because even and Socrates through Plato when said for a person these adj. "Kalos k'agathos" meant "the handsome and the brave".
    Unlike · Reply · 3 · Yesterday at 2:45pm

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey Dangerous?
    Like · Reply · 22 hrs

    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa Not exactly dangerous, but perilous.
    Unlike · Reply · 3 · 22 hrs

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker Cicero clearly had some philosophical issues that led to much personal peril! He most certainly wasn't using the hedonic calculus wisely. I think perilous is an apt description.
    Unlike · Reply · 1 · 22 hrs

    Ron Warrick

    Ron Warrick Jason Baker Once when I traveled to Italy on business, I got to talking to a lady in the office I was visiting. At one point, she mentioned she was from Arpinum, which was nearby. "That's the birthplace of Cicerone", she said with evident pride. "He was a great Italian author." Had I been on the ball I would have realized she meant Cicero, before she walked away, instead of two minutes later. I regret not getting the opportunity to purse that discussion.
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · 22 hrs · Edited

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker I think you might have lucked out on that one Ron. I learned a long time ago to never do anything other than offer effusive praise for a hometown favorite while visiting some place.
    Unlike · Reply · 1 · 22 hrs

    Ron Warrick

    Ron Warrick I should have mentioned that in Italian, "Cicerone" comes out as "Cheecheroni". I wasn't prepared for that!
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · 22 hrs

    Ron Warrick

    Ron Warrick Jason Baker No problem, I'm an admirer.
    Like · Reply · 1 · 22 hrs

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker 1f62e.png:O 1f609.png;)
    Like · Reply · 22 hrs

    Ron Warrick

    Ron Warrick Jason Baker Please don't vote me out of the group. 1f642.png:)
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · 22 hrs

    Christos Tsigaridas

    Christos Tsigaridas Ron Warrick I am Greek but my name in SPANISH mean Chicharrón
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · 18 hrs

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Vote you out of the group for saying something good about CIcero, Ron? For years I had in my office a three feet tall bust of Cicero. It's not in my office anymore, but I still have it!
    Like · Reply · 3 · 18 hrs

    Ron Warrick

    Ron Warrick Cassius Amicus When I build my villa, I will have one, too. 1f642.png:)
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · 18 hrs

    Ron Warrick

    Ron Warrick Christos Tsigaridas And "Cicero" is named after the Latin word for chickpea (garbanzo), which is "cicer".
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · 18 hrs

    Ron Warrick

    Ron Warrick Christos Tsigaridas Be careful, we will nickname you "Porky".
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · 18 hrs

    Christos Tsigaridas

    Christos Tsigaridas celebrating TSIGARIDEShttps://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=https%…EZKwPydmunreW1A

    Tovoion Tv Γιορτή τσιγαρίδας στο Σισάνι…
    YOUTUBE.COM

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    Christos Tsigaridas

    Christos Tsigaridas LOOK LIKE EPICUREAN GARDEN !!!
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · 17 hrs

    Ron Warrick

    Ron Warrick Christos Tsigaridas Wow. "My Big Fat Greek Tsigaridas Festival" 1f642.png:)
    Unlike · Reply · 3 · 17 hrs

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker I really feel like I'm missing out! I wish there were more food festivals around here. I'm at the end of a week long beer festival and there's no rhyme or reason to it.
    Unlike · Reply · 1 · 17 hrs

    Cassius Amicus

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  • Wenham - On Cicero's Interpretation of Katastematic Pleaure In Epicurus

    • Cassius
    • March 11, 2017 at 3:41 PM

    The full text of the Wenham Article (On Cicero's Interpretation of Katastematic Pleasure) is here.

    Every so often I like to remind people of two particularly important articles in our "files" section here. One is Boris Nikolsky's "Epicurus on Pleasure." The second, which I haven't mentioned recently, is Mathew Wenham's "On Cicero's Interpretation of Katastematic Pleasure in Epicurus." In all our discussions of details we shouldn't forget the central issue of being able to understand and describe the goal of life with clarity. What does "pleasure" really mean? There are at least two major dueling positions on how to answer that question. If you have read wikipedia or 98% of the internet websites on Epicurus, you know the majority position. Just be aware that there is a minority position (and of course it's the one I favor). Wenham does a good job of laying out the argument. Added on to Nikolsky's analysis, anyone interested in truly understanding the Epicurean goal of life owes it to themselves to read these two articles.

    *** In truth Nikolsky's is more important, because it argues that the entire katastematic/kinetic distinction is non-Epicurean and should be discarded. But if you choose to accept the distinction, Wenham shows how to interpret it in a way that neatly eliminates the contradictions inherent in talking about (1) a "static" state, in an Epicurean universe of atoms that never come to rest, and (2) a state in which feeling is absent, in an Epicurean universe where the feeling of pleasure is the guide to life.


  • Comparing the Stoics With The Epicureans

    • Cassius
    • March 11, 2017 at 3:39 PM
    Jimmy Daltrey

    March 8 at 7:59am

    Since we are discussing with Donald, I thought I would clear this up

    I did encounter Stoicism first, so am more familiar with it than Epicurus, however I hope you have seen that I don't have a particular axe to grind. I'm still learning about Epicurus.

    This keeps cropping up, a conflating of the Stoics with Platonists. They both claim heritage from Socrates but there are some stark dividing lines.

    Stoics are not essententialists, nor to they believe in transcendent forms.

    They are monists and materialists. All the Cosmos is matter, substance.

    The only Good and Bad are only moral, resulting from human action.(I believe they share this with Aristotle)

    A thing does not have an essence, a thing can be neither good or bad, it is inert. Indifferent.

    A gun is a chunk of metal. It has no value, no essence.

    A person can save lives with a gun, or kill innocents. That is where the morality lies.

    It is the action, or more precisely the intent of the action that is good or bad.

    Virtue, good and bad are physical, actions, thoughts (yes thoughts are material), words.

    If you want to debate a Stoic, woo and spirits is a poor line of attack. There are no spirits.

    The divine fire is not something that effects day to day life (Liebniz called energy divine force) and another person's providence not turn out well for you. Practicing, preparing for your life turning to shit is a big Stoic thing. (premeditatio malorum) so they are no Polly Anna's.

    The gods are physical, and not to be relied upon.

    You will find individual quotes that run against this, but the movement as a whole Stoicism is all about rationality, making rational decisions, rational actions, focusing on your own moral actions, and ignoring the rest.

    The "magical thinking" if you like, comes from Socrates, in that a moral person is necessarily a happy person. I think that is naive. I am sure the evil sleep well. Some of them at least.

    Also that the intent of your actions are more important than the outcome. Not sure at all about that.

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    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios It seems strange to me that Stoics consider only human intentional actions as morally good and evil. Animals suffer. Animals enjoy. Humans are animals. Animals choose, animals avoid. We all navigate the same universe. Many animals exhibit social virtues and mental joys and pains. Heck, lots of evidence indicates that plants should not be excluded.


    Lots of harm occurs by accident too. If in my lack of awareness I unintentionally harm someone, and they suffer a pain, and loss of time, work ... an evil event has coincided with them.


    So we should agree that objects like guns, animals and people are not evil, but that only events are evil/painful/cause suffering.


    I mean if modern Stoics accept materialism, and the Standard Model of Particle Physics tells us that all bodies are composed of elementary particles in motion through space and time, binding, colliding, and emitting and absorbing images, then Stoics should agree that only sequences of events (bindings, collisions, emissions and absorbtions) can be good/evil. When we casually say that a person, animal, plant, virus is evil, we must mean that we agree that it initiates/propagates events that are detected/sensed as pain and suffering.
    Unlike · Reply · 4 · March 8 at 4:19pm · Edited

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey Alexander, our understanding of the nature of animals and our relationship to them is pitifully flawed.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 8 at 1:06pm

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey Stoics are compatibilist, cause and effect all the way down, however humans can choose their reactions. An earthquake cannot be evil, it is just physics and a virus is simply acting in accordance with its nature. It has no ill intent. Big fish eat little fish. Stoicism and Epicureanism both proceed from observation of nature. The "good" is to be in accordance with one's nature, sharks kill little fish, dogs hunt in packs, birds fly, humans reason and act collectively. To each their own nature.
    Like · Reply · March 8 at 1:12pm

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    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios Many animals can choose their reactions too. Animals learn from consequences too, and many can adapt their behaviors based on what they have learned.


    The person that senses pain from the consequences of the earthquake is gonna suffer. They experience ...See More
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 8 at 3:25pm · Edited

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey I am very interested in animal psychology and like you think they reason after a manner. An earthquake is to be regretted but not evil.. It was not caused with intent.
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 8 at 3:33pm · Edited

    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios All events are natural. Even intentional ones.

    When Stoics say evil, they demand pre-planned intentional harm. And so they are forced to say that not all pain is evil, despite the obvious suffering....See More
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 8 at 4:22pm · Edited

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey It is a major distinction. For the Stoics pain does not affect your ability to reason, which is the highest good, so pain is considered neither good nor evil. A toothache does not nullify my ability to make prudent decisions, or at least it should not, if i am in control of my facilities (which is the difficult bit)
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 8 at 3:39pm · Edited

    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios I think that is a really bad example. Some snake bites directly attack your nervous system, and so your brain's ability to reason is severely compromised.


    A dull toothache may not affect your decision making abilities much, but a sharp toothache will....See More
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 8 at 4:45pm · Edited

    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios Jimmy Daltrey


    Suppose a snake bites an Epicurean, instinctively, and not pre-planned. The Epicurean suffers pain. The Epicurean does not say that the snake is evil. The Epicurean says the bite causes me pain and suffering....See More
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 8 at 7:44pm · Edited

    Dewayne Korth

    Dewayne Korth dispreferred indifferent
    Like · Reply · March 9 at 7:14am

    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios Am assuming Dewayne has answered like a "true Stoic" would have. Thanks. I am clueless about Stoicism.


    I understand "dispreferred". The snake's venom literally kills mammalian tissue. The Stoic's nervous system (soul) and body tissue is literally kil...See More
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 9 at 8:15am · Edited

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey "Does he really believe that his life, health, happiness is not important?" That's it. Pretty hardcore. You of course would prefer to be healthy, happy and free of pain, but there are greater priorities. You throw yourself on the grenade if that is the right thing to do. I don't think Epicureanism has the notion of self sacrifice in the absence of future reward.
    Like · Reply · March 9 at 10:11am

    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios Epicureans sometimes choose a pain, in order to secure long term happiness. Epicureans also sometimes choose a pain to avoid a greater pain. Epicureans also sometimes enjoy a pleasure now, by use of imagination, of the consequences of soon choosing a p...See More
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 9 at 11:47am · Edited

    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios Jimmy, here is the bit from TEIOD.


    "I must now address an error that many of you hold; an error that exposes the ignorance of your philosophy even more than your devotion to your false ideas, rather than to Nature. For you reason falsely when you contend that all causes must precede their effects. Because you think that all causes must come before the effects that result from them, you argue that pleasure cannot be the cause for living virtuously. But you are wrong, and Nature shows us that it is not true that all causes precede their effects. The truth is that some causes precede their effects, others coincide with their effects, and still others follow their effects. First, consider surgery, which is a cause that precedes its effect, the saving of a life. In this case, extreme pain must first be endured, but then pleasure quickly follows. Second, consider food, water, and love-making, as these are causes that coincide with their effects. We do not first eat food, or drink wine, or make love, and then, later, experience pleasure only afterward. Instead, the action brings about the resulting pleasure for us immediately, with no need to wait for the pleasure to arrive in the future. Third, consider the expectation of a brave man that he will win praise after his death, as this is an example of a cause which follows its effect. Such men experience pleasure now because they know there will be a favorable memory of them after they have gone. In such cases the pleasure occurs now, but the cause of the pleasure occurs later. Many men are ignorant of these facts, and they hold that virtue is a result to be desired on its own, and is caused by living in a certain way. These men do not understand that virtues are not results, but causes. Virtues are causes which coincide with their effects, for virtues are born at the same time as the pleasure of happy living which they bring. [Those of you who do not understand the philosophy of Epicurus, or those who choose to misrepresent it, go completely astray when you fail to understand that pleasure is the end of life. For Epicurus did not hold back from teaching that if a lifestyle of debauchery were sufficient to bring about a happy life, we would have no reason to blame those who engage in debauchery."
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 9 at 10:39am

    Cassius Amicus

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    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Jimmy at least one prominent article at modernstoicism.com disagrees with your view of the importance of divine fire: "Without the Divine, There is No Stoicism" https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=http%3…ya21P46ReJ8IFZU

    Modern Stoicism
    Home of Stoicon and Stoic Week
    MODERNSTOICISM.COM

    Like · Reply · Remove Preview · 3 · March 8 at 1:25pm

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey Lol: <By Stoic teachings, ‘God’ is immanent for the Divine Fire manifests us through the quantum world moment by moment and so permeates our very being> Epictetus was silent on quantum mechanics. He sounds like Deepak Chopra. Who is he?
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 8 at 1:35pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Jimmy Daltrey Probably we need to ask Donald that question 1f609.png;)
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 8 at 4:51pm

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey He sounds like a dualist to me. "God" is not manifested through anything. "God" is everything. It's materialistic monism. No space for spooks.
    Unlike · Reply · 1 · March 9 at 10:15am

    Cassius Amicus

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    Matt Jackson

    Matt Jackson So my biggest concern with Stoicism comes from its terminology. I personally DID come from a Neoplatonist background so I have an understanding of pure platonic idealism. My concern that I wanted addressed is the nature of the Divine. Clearly we are not actually talking about anything "Divine." When it is brought up it is quickly dismissed by Stoics. But even pure materialism without a Divine Principle has implications on virtue. The basis of the Stoic cosmology is a "pantheism" that is fragmented among individual reasoning minds. That's all fine as long as it is interpreted as not actually being Divine, and is a materialistic process.


    But like I said, if that is the final answer we are going with, that there is no "Divinity" by which virtue is contemplated on a higher level, then we must examine the nature of the individual reasoning minds that have no real continuity among each other. God makes things holy in religion, the One and Nous in Neoplatonism makes Virtue...virtuous. So then it would follow that individual reasoning minds are where virtue is conceived in Stoicism. There's no higher contemplating entity.


    So we must address the problem of relativism of the individual reasoning minds, since virtue is not a "stand alone" divinely inspired concept.
    Unlike · Reply · 4 · March 8 at 3:49pm · Edited

    Matt Jackson

    Matt Jackson I can say I really appreciate your candid willingness to cross philosophical borders, its really pleasant..
    Unlike · Reply · 3 · March 8 at 4:02pm

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    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey There is no fragmentation no discontinuity. There is one mind in which we all share. Think Borg.
    Like · Reply · March 9 at 10:58am · Edited

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey Unless your brain is somehow made of a different set of substances than everyone else's. Silicone perhaps.
    Like · Reply · March 9 at 11:07am

    Matt Jackson

    Matt Jackson It's just that this cosmology is so hard to pin down. The ancient writings clearly point to a "fragmented" God figure. But modern Stoics clearly deny any divine interpretation. Objectively it's very confusing.


    "Epictetus imagines Zeus talking to him: ...See More
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 9 at 12:33pm

    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios Even the Borg, was made of individuals. A collective. Each had their own brain, sensors, faculties and body. It was possible for each to become disconnected, and reconnected, and resynchronization took a finite amount of time/energy. The whole "mind" was distributed in the individuals and communication was not instantaneous. Knowledge acquired by one individual had to be transported/communicated to the collective.
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 9 at 12:51pm · Edited

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey It's Pantheism Matt Jackson
    Like · Reply · March 9 at 1:27pm

    Hiram Crespo

    Hiram Crespo the only way we avoid falling into superstition through this rabbit hole of pantheism is by understanding that any "collective mind" is not brought about my magic or telepathy, but through a complex system of communication. Nature isn't like the movie ...See More
    Like · Reply · 4 · March 9 at 1:44pm

    Hiram Crespo

    Hiram Crespo I really don't know how else to reconcile what I'm reading with the study of nature. I do not believe that it's likely that Epicurean Gods, if they exist, communicate with us.
    Like · Reply · 3 · March 9 at 1:46pm · Edited

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey Richard Dawkins calls Pantheism "sexed up atheism" 1f602.png?
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 9 at 2:00pm

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker Jimmy Daltrey So basically, it's marketing bullshit? 1f603.png:D 1f603.png:D
    Like · Reply · 2 · March 9 at 2:09pm

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey Have you read Spinoza?
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 9 at 4:48pm

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker I don't really dig determinist philosophers. I find their arguments unconvincing.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 9 at 4:54pm

    Matt Jackson

    Matt Jackson I get the idea of pantheism, mostly as a poetic device to show nature as divine. From a practical standpoint it's unprovable since it's just ...nature. It should ultimately be called pan-naturalism.
    Like · Reply · March 9 at 4:57pm

    Matt Jackson

    Matt Jackson In the Hindu tradition Sankyha is the closest thing to this idea of a non-theistic universal consciousness. The purusha (mind) acts upon matter in a sort of impotent way. It's like mind or consciousness exists independently of matter, but it has no power of its own.
    Like · Reply · March 9 at 5:00pm

    Matt Jackson

    Matt Jackson But for it to be true we need to hammer out the mind-body dualism and hard consciousness problems.
    Like · Reply · March 9 at 5:04pm · Edited

    Matt Jackson

    Matt Jackson Anything with a theism or Deism attached to it that doesn't actually have to do with a Divine Principle is often confusing.
    Like · Reply · March 9 at 5:04pm

    Matt Jackson

    Matt Jackson For most of these "theistic" ideas to work there actually needs to be some sort of "active" Divine Mind that is separate from individual minds. Individual minds CAN take part in the greater whole as it is in the Neoplatonic Nous or the Vedantic Brahman or Bhagavan, but there needs to be true autonomy. It needs to be a separate entity ultimately.
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · March 9 at 5:14pm · Edited

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey There is no mind body dualism in either Stoic or Epicurean traditions. Mind is physical in both, as are the gods.
    Like · Reply · Yesterday at 10:01am

    Matt Jackson

    Matt Jackson Right, so in that case the utmost mechanistic and natural explanations for things win the day. Abstract ideals mean nothing since everything is reduced to sensory stimuli reacting to matter. So for me personally a philosophy of strict naturalism that focuses only on physical process is key. Epicurean philosophy fills that role for me personally.
    Like · Reply · 1 · Yesterday at 10:06am

    Matt Jackson

    Matt Jackson The way the Epicurean gods work is that, though they are physical, they might as well just be dreams since they are passive beings that don't do anything to mortals. They may as well not exist since they don't disrupt our happiness. They being in a state of bliss are poetic role models for the Epicurean.
    Like · Reply · 2 · Yesterday at 10:09am

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey Stoicism is no different, strictly naturalist. No supernatural, just that nature is rationally structured and everything in nature is structured according to the same rules. I think of a unifed space time.
    Like · Reply · 1 · Yesterday at 10:49am

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey The Epicurean explanation of how the gods are perceivable, dreams also, is fascinating. Like we live in a cloud of physical projections of images perceived directly by the mind, not the senses.
    Like · Reply · Yesterday at 10:52am

    Matt Jackson

    Matt Jackson Well in a practical sense they effect us as dreams do, really in no actual way. But if they do exist they are the equivalent of purple unicorns in the Andromeda galaxy. They may exist, truly exist, but they have no effect on my life or pursuit of pleasure.
    Like · Reply · 2 · Yesterday at 10:55am · Edited

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey ? The concept of physical representations of things floating into your head from outside doesn't strike you as worthy of comment? For the Epicureans the gods were very real, the proof being, in their own words, everybody has them. That they are indifferent is another matter.
    Like · Reply · 1 · Yesterday at 12:29pm

    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios Epicurean gods are never sensed. Humans imaginate them. A generated presentation. Thanks to memory of prior sensations, combined with compositing, and perhaps some cosmic radiation.

    These presentations are not reliable.
    Like · Reply · 2 · Yesterday at 12:33pm · Edited

    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios Epicureans know that real gods exist, because it is easy to say that some species exists which is maximally happy and maximally incorruptible.
    Like · Reply · 2 · Yesterday at 12:40pm

    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios Lucretius' talk about the gods is not reliable. He was not an advanced student. Agreed? Plus his poem was under revision. Not completed.
    Like · Reply · 2 · Yesterday at 12:42pm · Edited

    Matt Jackson

    Matt Jackson The Gods are what we imagine them to be. They hypothetically exist to whatever extent we want to entertain the idea of what they "may be."
    Like · Reply · 2 · Yesterday at 12:45pm

    Matt Jackson

    Matt Jackson If we are going the Sci-fi fantasy route I might imagine them as the elves in the Lord of the rings trilogy. Immortal and blessed beings that are anthropomorphic.
    Like · Reply · 1 · Yesterday at 12:47pm

    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios Epicurus says we should imagine them as happy and incorruptible, and not add other character traits.
    Like · Reply · 2 · Yesterday at 12:48pm

    Matt Jackson

    Matt Jackson They are completely inconsequential to our happiness. They do not interfere with us. It's as if they don't exist.
    Like · Reply · 2 · Yesterday at 12:49pm

    Matt Jackson

    Matt Jackson (And for many it is practical to simply not believe they do)
    Like · Reply · 2 · Yesterday at 12:50pm

    Matt Jackson

    Matt Jackson Since for most God equates to the Platonic Demiurge or the Abrahamic or Dharmic Gods of Religion. The Epicurean Gods are very different.
    Like · Reply · 2 · Yesterday at 12:57pm

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey I'm sorry, but for the Epicureans the gods were real physical beings, perceptions of which were sensed directly by the soul.
    Like · Reply · 1 · 22 hrs

    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios soul is the nervous system

    brain and peripheral

    mind and spirit
    Like · Reply · 1 · 22 hrs

    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios gods never sensed by sense organs
    Like · Reply · 1 · 22 hrs

    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios am driving... later.
    Like · Reply · 1 · 22 hrs

    Matt Jackson

    Matt Jackson Perceptions of the gods are taken from our impressions of the natural world. But in the case of the Epicureans they did truly believe the gods were real physical beings. There's no argument there, but what is different about them is that they are passi...See More
    Like · Reply · 22 hrs

    Matt Jackson

    Matt Jackson There is no real divinity in Epicurean philosophy. Not in the same Platonic and religious sense we are used to. The gods are to Epicurus real physical immortal perfectly happy beings. They don't bother humans, so they end up as a hypothetical footnote in the philosophy.
    Like · Reply · 22 hrs · Edited

    Matt Jackson

    Matt Jackson They are literally immortal physical "aliens" that live throughout the cosmos in total bliss.
    Like · Reply · 22 hrs

    Cassius Amicus

    Write a reply...

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus I'll drop this here in lieu of a better place. Looks like James Warren has previously and thoroughly taken apart modern stoicism, but I don't have access to his article to know for sure - https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=https%…EOKAZYshb0LrZnY


    A related quote from the article linked pretty much sums up the situation:Image may contain: text

    Like · Reply · 3 · March 9 at 8:51am · Edited

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey Irvine undertakes quite a heavy rewrite of some basic stuff which a lot of people don't like.. It's a bit like the followers of Brian's left shoe vs the followers of Brian's right shoe.
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · March 9 at 10:40am

    Cassius Amicus

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    Haris Dimitriadis

    Haris Dimitriadis The core difference between the two philosophies is that while the Epicurean considers happiness as an emotional state the stoics, as well as all other philosophies, as a conceptual state. To the first matters how one feels whereas to others how one thinks. It is as simple as that.
    Unlike · Reply · 4 · March 9 at 3:25pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Haris I think there is a lot of truth in what you just wrote, but I am wondering if the core differences can be stated adequately without reference to "pleasure" (?)
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 9 at 3:36pm

    Haris Dimitriadis

    Haris Dimitriadis Cassius,


    Pleasure is a positive emotion. It is dealt with by positive psychology. Pain is also an emotion, but on the other side of the emotional spectrum. In both cases we are talking about feelings. Happiness to the Epicureans is feeling good.

    The Stoics, as well as all the rest philosophies are not interested in happiness, as we understand it, but in well being, or eudaimonia, which is a conceptual state. But these two states, happiness and well being are two independent functions of the mind. One may be successful, moral, rational, etc but unhappy and vice versa.

    That's why we may say that happiness, as a feeling, is a choice. One has to make a fundamental choice. Whether he values most how he feels or whether he is successful-wealthy, prestigious, etc.
    Unlike · Reply · 4 · March 9 at 3:51pm

    Matt Jackson

    Matt Jackson It's good to see you here Haris! 1f600.png?
    Unlike · Reply · 3 · March 9 at 4:11pm

    Haris Dimitriadis

    Haris Dimitriadis I have always been following your posts. For the time being though I am very much involved with the finalization of the details of the book. My apologies.
    Unlike · Reply · 3 · March 9 at 4:20pm

    Matt Jackson

    Matt Jackson I totally understand, it's always a pleasure to see your comments and perspective. I hope all is well.
    Unlike · Reply · 3 · March 9 at 4:21pm

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker Haris, is that second paragraph a characterization of the Stoic position or a general picture? Also, I was with you on feelings until I read the third paragraph. It's my understanding that feelings are automatic like sense-perception or preconceptions. Could you clarify?
    Unlike · Reply · 1 · March 9 at 5:23pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Haris I am interested in your answer to Jason's question but here is my comment: I agree with paragraph one, and I see paragraph two as applicable not only to the Stoics but to anyone in general who sees the goal of life as "being a good person" or an...See More
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 9 at 8:08pm · Edited

    Haris Dimitriadis

    Haris Dimitriadis Sorry, but it was late and fell asleep.

    Cassius, you are describing better than me what i mean. My answer to Jason's question is that, feelings are created in two ways. The first is through the automatic like senses function of the mind and the second is through thoughts. The later are created at a second stage, when the initial automatic emotional reaction of the body is realized by the conscious mind. Free Will and logic are then activated and they give their own interpretation to the physical emotional reactions. These thoughts in turn set off a second round of emotional reactions, which may be of greater or lesser intensity then the original, depending on the quality of our thoughts. It is said that these thoughts are the cause of panic attacks and unhappiness in modern societies. Fortunately we are able to get hold of our thoughts and by developing an optimistic attitude to life, as for example the Epicurean philosophy suggests, we can greatly influence the quality of our thoughts and life.

    Perceptions is the means to influence the quality of our life. If one chooses to follow perceptions that value most wealth, morality, etc then he is choosing the path to well being, as the non epicurean philosophies suggest. If instead he follows perceptions that value most feelings he is pursuing happiness as Epicurus suggests.

    So happiness is a choice, in the sense that we are capable in choosing the meaning of our life and adopting the perceptions that support it throughout our life.
    Unlike · Reply · 3 · Yesterday at 12:41am

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker That's very similar to an article on psychology I read recently Haris. The psychologist described emotions (he included analogues for pleasure and pain in emotions) and feelings as two separate experiences. Emotions in his model are the automatic reaction to stimuli and feelings are what results when we process our emotions, rationally or otherwise. He claimed that we can train ourselves to respond to our emotions in a way that leads to more satisfaction if our current response is unsatisfactory, which seemed pretty self-evident to me but apparently is controversial in academia.


    I don't recall that he had a methodology for doing so, but I immediately thought of the parallels to Epicurean philosophy.


    Thanks for the response!
    Like · Reply · 1 · Yesterday at 11:38am

    Haris Dimitriadis

    Haris Dimitriadis Hi Jason,

    We will have soon the chance to expand on this and especially on the way that the philosophical epicurean counselling acts in improving the quality of life.
    Like · Reply · 2 · Yesterday at 12:04pm

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker I look forward to that Haris. It's a perennial question that I have difficulty answering without relying on modern scholarship that doesn't explicitly reference Epicurus.
    Like · Reply · 2 · Yesterday at 12:08pm

    Cassius Amicus

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    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey Happiness is a poor translation of Eudaemonia. Wellbeing would be closer.
    Like · Reply · March 9 at 4:51pm

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker Well-being is just as poorly defined in lay discussions. Do we mean comfortable, healthy, happy or all three? It's all about the context.
    Unlike · Reply · 1 · Yesterday at 12:11pm

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey Well being, being well, to be in accordance with one's nature. To be at ease, unperturbed, unhindered.
    Like · Reply · Yesterday at 12:26pm

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker That's a novel definition! I use the common definition; a state characterized by health, happiness and prosperity.
    Like · Reply · 1 · Yesterday at 12:34pm

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey We are translating from ancient Greek. How would you put Eudaemonia intro English? It means literally "good demon"
    Like · Reply · 1 · 22 hrs

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker We're talking about the definition of the preferred English translation. You said well-being is a better definition than happiness. I gave the definition (which includes happiness) for the purposes of discussion, you provided another definition that isn't in common currency, I clarified again. If we're going to redefine an English word to mean something other than what it usually means in order to make a translation clear, why not use a different word or series of words to more accurately reflect our intention? I thought Stoics were all about intention, Jimmy? 1f603.png:D
    Like · Reply · 22 hrs · Edited

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey I would rather we stuck with the original Greek terms. Happy, etymologically means "lucky", as in plain dumb luck. Happy coincidence. Fortunate, by chance. Hapless being the opposite. Children are happy when you give them balloons, which am sure is not what the ancient philosophers were driving at.. Should we try sticking with the Greek terms?
    Like · Reply · 5 hrs

  • Comparing Translations of the Tetrapharmakon

    • Cassius
    • March 11, 2017 at 3:36 PM
    Jason Baker

    15 hrs

    The Hutchinson translation* of the Tetrapharmakos annoys me. Here are a handful of other English translations of Philodemus' version for contemplation:

    God should not concern us.

    Death is not to be feared.

    What is good is easy to obtain.

    What is bad is easily avoided. -Bob Lane

    Not to be feared is god

    Not to be felt is death

    What is good is easily done

    What is dire is easily borne. -Anon

    God is not fearsome,

    Death not frightening,

    The good easily got,

    The bad easily endured. -Tsouna

    Not to be feared - god,

    not to be viewed with apprehension - death,

    the good - easily acquired,

    the terrible - easily endured. -Gilleland (paraphrased)

    God presents no fears,

    death no worries,

    while good is readily attainable,

    evil is readily endurable. -Long and Sedley

    *Don't fear god,

    Don't worry about death;

    What is good is easy to get,

    What is terrible is easy to endure

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    Hiram Crespo

    Hiram Crespo the fourth one sounds like YodaImage may contain: text

    Like · Reply · 3 · 9 hrs · Edited

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker The full translation he provided was

    Not to be feared - God,

    not to be viewed with apprehension - death,

    on one hand, the good - easily acquired,

    on the other hand, the terrible - easily endured.


    I felt that was very unwieldy and novel, since <handedness> was not found in the original. I omitted it as unnecessary, and the Yoda-ness appealed. 1f642.png:)
    Like · Reply · 4 hrs · Edited

    Cassius Amicus

    Write a reply...

    Mish Taylor

    Mish Taylor I re read the 4th one in 'yoda voice' ! 1f642.png:)
    Like · Reply · 2 · 9 hrs

    Matt Jackson

    Matt Jackson God no.

    Death no.

    Good easy.

    Bad easy.


    The quick and terrible Jackson Translation.
    Like · Reply · 2 · 8 hrs

    Panos Alexiou

    Panos Alexiou I'm also not convinced about the general translation of 'ανύποπτον' as not frightening. It means more 'not perceivable' which also makes more sense.
    Like · Reply · 2 · 8 hrs

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Jason could you add the Hutchinson translation to the original post for comparison?
    Like · Reply · 1 · 7 hrs

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus While I use the Tetrapharmakon often and I don't want to dwell on my reservations about it, I personally still find myself choking over the word "easy" or even "readily" in parts 3 and 4. So I like to remember that those words (easily / readily) are nowhere contained in the full length of PD3 and PD4 as attributed to Epicurus himself (and I don't think that Epicurus himself would have used the tone which comes across in English to summarize his meaning, which was probably already as terse as he could make it). But I also don't condemn the writer of the Tetrapharmakon for the seemingly harsh / cavalier result, as we have so little of the context in which the writer would have no doubt have explained fully what he meant.
    Like · Reply · 5 · 7 hrs · Edited

    Ilkka Vuoristo

    Ilkka Vuoristo "You can only understand the four-fold cure if you understand the whole of the philosophy." 1f603.png:D
    Unlike · Reply · 4 · 6 hrs

  • What is the relationship between Arete (moral virtue) in Hellenistic Philosophy vs. Religions

    • Cassius
    • March 11, 2017 at 3:32 PM
    Jimmy Daltrey shared a link.

    March 9 at 11:19am

    The notion of arete is key to Hellenistic philosophy and often misunderstood. Conflation with religious law is wholly inaccurate.

    Arete (moral virtue) - Wikipedia
    , this notion of excellence was ultimately bound up with the notion of the fulfillment of purpose or function: the act of living up to one's full potential.
    EN.WIKIPEDIA.ORG

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    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus OK this is an interesting test of Epicurean vs other philosophy:. **Where in the letters of Epicurus, and/or reliable quotes by him, does the Greek word "arete" appear, and how is it used?** Finding places in Epicurean texts where this is referred to would be very interesting.
    Like · Reply · March 9 at 11:29am · Edited

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker In Elli's graphic below, aretes is listed as one of the important words in the Letter to Menoeceus.
    Unlike · Reply · 1 · March 9 at 11:32am

    Cassius Amicus

    Write a reply...

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus One way to search for arete in Epicurean text would be by searching at the Epicurus wiki, but I am not able to search and find it - maybe I am searching wrong but (?) https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=http%3…dR4l-4jlYWyttQw

    Epicurus Wiki
    . Epicurus developed his teachings during the Hellenistic era of Ancient Greece — a period of transition…
    WIKI.EPICURISM.INFO

    Like · Reply · Remove Preview · March 9 at 11:26am

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker I'm not certain the search function works on that page at all. Entering Epicurus returns no hits.
    Unlike · Reply · 1 · March 9 at 11:30am

    Ron Warrick

    Ron Warrick I searched the site via google. No hits. I think excellence was not a particularly relevant concept to Epicurus. Can't think why it would be.
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · March 9 at 1:35pm

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Other than as a tool to achieve pleasure it doesn't seem like excellence would be a major topic tremendously more than would the topic of food or hammers or nails. But people don't admire and worship food and hammers and nails like they do "virtue" so it has to be addressed to explain why admiration for tools doesn't add up to explaining the purpose for which you are using those tools.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 9 at 1:46pm

    Cassius Amicus

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    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Using Perseus it would "appear" that this is one location: [132] οὐ γὰρ πότοι καὶ κῶμοι συνείροντες οὐδ᾽ ἀπολαύσεις παίδων καὶ γυναικῶν οὐδ᾽ ἰχθύων καὶ τῶν ἄλλων, ὅσα φέρει πολυτελὴς τράπεζα, τὸν ἡδὶν γεννᾷ βίον, ἀλλὰ νήφων λογισμὸς καὶ τὰς αἰτίας ἐξερευνῶν πάσης αἱρέσεως καὶ φυγῆς καὶ τὰς δόξας ἐξελαύνων ἐξ ὧν πλεῖστος τὰς ψυχὰς καταλαμβάνει θόρυβος. τούτων δὲ πάντων ἀρχὴ καὶ τὸ μέγιστον ἀγαθὸν φρόνησις: διὸ καὶ φιλοσοφίας τιμιώτερον ὑπάρχει φρόνησις, ἐξ ἧς αἱ λοιπαὶ πᾶσαι πεφύκασιν ἀρεταί, διδάσκουσα ὡς οὐκ ἔστιν ἡδέως ζῆν ἄνευ τοῦ φρονίμως καὶ καλῶς καὶ δικαίως, οὐδὲ φρονίμως καὶ καλῶς καὶ δικαίως ἄνευ τοῦ ἡδέως: συμπεφύκασι γὰρ αἱ ἀρεταὶ τῷ ζῆν ἡδέως, καὶ τὸ ζῆν ἡδέως τούτων ἐστὶν ἀχώριστον.


    [132] It is not an unbroken succession of drinking-bouts and of revelry, not sexual love, not the enjoyment of the fish and other delicacies of a luxurious table, which produce a pleasant life ; it is sober reasoning, searching out the grounds of every choice and avoidance, and banishing those beliefs through which the greatest tumults take possession of the soul. Of all this the beginning and the greatest good is prudence. Wherefore prudence is a more precious thing even than philosophy ; from it spring all the other virtues, for it teaches that we cannot lead a life of pleasure which is not also a life of prudence, honour, and justice ; nor lead a life of prudence, honour, and justice, which is not also a life of pleasure. For the virtues have grown into one with a pleasant life, and a pleasant life is inseparable from them.
    Like · Reply · 3 · March 9 at 11:35am

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus This is Diogenes Laertius rather than Epicurus:


    [138] Διὰ δὲ τὴν ἡδονὴν καὶ τὰς ἀρετὰς αἱρεῖσθαι, οὐ δι᾽ αὑτάς, ὥσπερ τὴν ἰατρικὴν διὰ τὴν ὑγίειαν, καθά φησι καὶ Διογένης ἐν τῇ εἰκοστῇ τῶν Ἐπιλέκτων, ὃς καὶ διαγωγὴν λέγει τὴν ἀγωγήν. ὁ δ᾽ Ἐπίκουρος καὶ ἀχώριστόν φησι τῆς ἡδονῆς τὴν ἀρετὴν μόνην: τὰ δ᾽ ἄλλα χωρίζεσθαι, οἷον βρωτά. Καὶ φέρε οὖν δὴ νῦν τὸν κολοφῶνα, ὡς ἂν εἴποι τις, ἐπιθῶμεν τοῦ παντὸς συγγράμματος καὶ τοῦ βίου τοῦ φιλοσόφου, τὰς Κυρίας αὐτοῦ δόξας παραθέμενοι καὶ ταύταις τὸ πᾶν σύγγραμμα κατακλείσαντες, τέλει χρησάμενοι τῇ τῆς εὐδαιμονίας ἀρχῇ.


    [138] And we choose the virtues too on account of pleasure and not for their own sake, as we take medicine for the sake of health. So too in the twentieth book of his Epilecta says Diogenes, who also calls education ῾ἀγωγἤ recreation ῾ διαγωγ ἤ. Epicurus describes virtue as the sine qua non of pleasure, i.e. the one thing without which pleasure cannot be, everything else, food, for instance, being separable, i.e. not indispensable to pleasure.
    Like · Reply · 4 · March 9 at 11:38am

    Hiram Crespo

    Hiram Crespo https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=http%3…NlqtXglMU7Pfl7A

    On Epicurean Virtue
    A discussion of Epicurean virtue is needed as a result of our constant encounters with students of philosophy…
    SOCIETYOFEPICURUS.COM

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    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey We are agreed that arete is not a value system or anything resembling a codification of behaviour, punishment and reward or religious devotion. Rather personal excellence.
    Like · Reply · March 9 at 1:52pm · Edited

    Hiram Crespo

    Hiram Crespo no. Not personal excellence, but any means to pleasure. Perhaps the Buddhist concept of upayas is better suited, as they are understood and usually translated as "efficient means". Efficient means to what?! is the key question. We say it's to pleasure. Buddhists say it's to nirvana.
    Like · Reply · 1 · March 9 at 2:08pm

    Matt Jackson

    Matt Jackson I post this again because the Neoplatonists did conceive of virtue as proceeding from a Divine Principle. Virtue is emanated from the Divine Mind into the Gods who we emulate their likeness.


    But if there be no Divine Principle then man is the measure...See More
    Like · Reply · 3 · March 9 at 6:17pm · Edited

    Matt Jackson

    Matt Jackson "What, then, precisely is Virtue, collectively and in the particular? The clearer method will be to begin with the particular, for so the common element by which all the forms hold the general name will readily appear.


    The Civic Virtues, on which we have touched above, are a principle or order and beauty in us as long as we remain passing our life here: they ennoble us by setting bound and measure to our desires and to our entire sensibility, and dispelling false judgement- and this by sheer efficacy of the better, by the very setting of the bounds, by the fact that the measured is lifted outside of the sphere of the unmeasured and lawless.


    And, further, these Civic Virtues- measured and ordered themselves and acting as a principle of measure to the Soul which is as Matter to their forming- are like to the measure reigning in the over-world, and they carry a trace of that Highest Good in the Supreme; for, while utter measurelessness is brute Matter and wholly outside of Likeness, any participation in Ideal-Form produces some corresponding degree of Likeness to the formless Being There. And participation goes by nearness: the Soul nearer than the body, therefore closer akin, participates more fully and shows a godlike presence, almost cheating us into the delusion that in the Soul we see God entire.


    This is the way in which men of the Civic Virtues attain Likeness."


    Plotinus, On Virtue.
    Like · Reply · 1 · Yesterday at 9:58am · Edited

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey Hiram Crespo: Stoic arete (I don't actually like the translation Virtue, Excellence is better) would be, I think, efficient to "being in accordance with nature" that nature in the case of humanity being a rational being. Arete, being ultimately rational (applied wisdom in effect) gives us the circular nature of arete being for its own sake.
    Like · Reply · Yesterday at 10:09am

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey They then go on to argue that an excellent person, a person in accordance with their nature, will necessarily have eudaemonia and ataraxia.
    Like · Reply · Yesterday at 10:12am · Edited

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker Jimmy, humans aren't (just) rational beings! MoSto wants to throw the baby out with the bathwater, cleaving off our irrational experience of life with the cost of being indifferent to pleasure. To borrow some preferred translations of eudaemonia, arete, and ataraxia, it's not well-being (pleasurable living) if wisdom (sagacity in the management of one's affairs (efficient means)) isn't continuous (without disturbance).


    We call someone wise when they experience pleasurable living without disturbance. But what does Stoicism know of wise men? It is considered an unachievable goal through their methodology.
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · Yesterday at 12:31pm

    Stephen Brown

    Stephen Brown The stoic Greek terms or meanings seem much more interrelated than the usual English equivalents e.g. eudaimonia is more like flourishing than a kind of passive happiness . Something flourishes when it expresses its particular arete or excellence e.g. a horse running fast .The same unity is not apparent when English synonyms are used. Hence a lot of circular arguments or unnecessary conflicts arise.
    Like · Reply · 1 · 13 hrs · Edited

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker I think we can leave stoic out of that description and just say Greek, but I concur. That said, these concepts are universal. We have words for them in English, it's just a matter of figuring out which ones make sense as part of the whole.
    Like · Reply · 1 · 17 hrs

    Stephen Brown

    Stephen Brown Yes you are right . The ' stoic ' was an afterthought. I have noticed a similar difficulty when the four stoic virtues arr discussed as they are considered a unity with wisdom supreme. Whether this is due to Greek retranslation I could not say. However...See More
    Like · Reply · 1 · 13 hrs

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey Stephen "But what does Stoicism know of wise men? It is considered an unachievable goal through their methodology" you are criticizing them for not believing in an illusory dream of godlike perfection? All they say is improvement is possible. Eminently practical. Stoic psychology is the most powerful aspect of it.
    Like · Reply · 9 hrs

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker Stephen didn't write that, I did. 1f642.png:)


    Isn't it interesting how Epicureans defined the wise man as something eminently practicable but the Stoics defined wise man as something illusory?


    Nothing motivates like pursuing an unachievable goal. Perhaps that's why stoics are so miserable all of the time, the impracticality of achieving their aims. 1f609.png;)
    Like · Reply · 4 hrs

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey Lol 1f606.png?. Do you know any Stoics? I've never met one in the flesh.
    Like · Reply · 4 hrs

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker I have two friends, one much closer and older than the other, who profess to be stoics. One doesn't really know what it means, other than the common conception of "stiff upper-lip." I would consider him a proto-MoSto, he has the desire but not the motivation to dig deeper into the classics. The other has spent most of his adult life contemplating philosophy alone in the wildernesses of the world as a solo adventurer. He is VERY well versed in classical Stoicism and knows very well the bases of his philosophy and his misery.
    Like · Reply · 3 hrs

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey Hmmm, alone in the wilderness isn't very Stoic. 1f600.png?
    Like · Reply · 1 · 2 hrs

    Jason Baker

    Jason Baker Right? I keep telling him the more time he spends out in the desert the more messianic he's going to become. The isolation makes people crazy, no exceptions.
    Like · Reply · 1 · 2 hrs

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey Also, how does he get to practice Stoicism with nobody to piss him off? It's like boxing solo.
    Like · Reply · 2 hrs

  • Is it true that "ataraxia is not physical pleasure, or even mental pleasure, but a state of inner calm?"

    • Cassius
    • March 11, 2017 at 3:25 PM

    5 hrs

    Discussing translations: when we talk of pleasure do we mean hedone, ataraxia, euthymia or terpsis? For Epicurus Ataraxia is the greatest good, but ataraxia is not physical pleasure, or even mental pleasure, but a state of inner calm.

    Comments

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus " when we talk of pleasure" -- I get nervous about that question myself as I know so little Greek. To avoid reading too much into a single word I always want to know the sentence and the context.
    Like · Reply · 2 · 5 hrs

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey It's like with the Bible (don't shoot me I'm an atheist) Hell (a good Viking word, not even vaguely Greek, Aramaic or Hebrew) is used to translate Sheol, Gehenna, Hades and Tartarus. As I said below, I think it best when discussing detail to stick with...See More
    Like · Reply · 5 hrs · Edited

    Tomos William

    Tomos William "I think it best when discussing detail to stick with the term originally used, otherwise one gets tied in knots quibbling over 21st century definitions of almost arbitrarily chosen equivalents in a distantly related language"

    Even if we stuck with the original term, how could we hope to understand it without (implicitly or explicitly) presupposing '21st century definitions'?
    Like · Reply · 5 hrs · Edited

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey That is up for discussion, however we don't end up with positively unhelpful definitions like "virtue" which in context has nothing to do with the implications of religious obedience we have now. "Happiness" is positively frivolous, and "pleasure" brings foot massages to mind.
    Like · Reply · 1 · 4 hrs

    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios That's so funny, because its true. Out there in everyday land, many folk think of happiness as frivolous, and pleasure as foot massages.
    LOL!
    1f603.png:D
    Like · Reply · 2 · 4 hrs

    Cassius Amicus

    Write a reply...

    Haris Dimitriadis

    Haris Dimitriadis This is outright nonsense.
    Like · Reply · 5 hrs

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey I corrected a typo, does it make mores sense now?
    Like · Reply · 5 hrs

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus I am not seeing indications that the original post was edited. This is the version I am responding to: "Discussing translations: when we talk of pleasure do we mean hedone, ataraxia, euthymia or terpsis? For Epicurus Ataraxia is the greatest good, but ataraxia is not physical pleasure, or even mental pleasure, but a state of inner calm."
    Like · Reply · 4 hrs

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Somehow I did not read the second sentence you wrote, Jimmy! 1f642.png:) That second sentence will take a lot of unwinding.
    Like · Reply · 5 hrs

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey There was a typo. Does it make any mores sense now?
    Like · Reply · 5 hrs

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus IF you refer to this form "For Epicurus Ataraxia as the greatest good, but is not physical pleasure, or even mental pleasure, but a state of inner calm." the answer is that it makes sense, but I will argue it is profoundly wrong / incomplete. 1f609.png;)
    Like · Reply · 1 · 5 hrs

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey That Epicurus held ataraxia to be the greatest good or that ataraxia is not physical or mental pleasure? Or both?
    Like · Reply · 5 hrs · Edited

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus I would certainly argue against the second (that ataraxia is not physical or mental pleasure) and probably against the first (That Epicurus held ataraxia to be the greatest good) as well. The issue of "greatest good is very subtle and there is a direct quote from Epicurus on "the meaning of "good" which I will find and add here.
    Like · Reply · 1 · 5 hrs · Edited

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Plutarch, That Epicurus actually makes a pleasant life impossible, 7, p. 1091A: Not only is the basis that they assume for the pleasurable life untrustworthy and insecure, it is quite trivial and paltry as well, inasmuch as their “thing delighted” – th...See More
    Like · Reply · 3 · 5 hrs

    Cassius Amicus

    Write a reply...


    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Jimmy I grant you that your second sentence can be found in various forms all across the internet, but there are serious problems with it. In our FILES section here there are articles by Nikolsky and Wentham which explain that ataraxia is not divorced from the ordinary concept of pleasure. Also, there is the much more detailed explanation of this in Gosling and Taylor's "The Greeks on Pleasure" I will try to steer you to a couple of excerpts....
    Like · Reply · 2 · 5 hrs

    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios I don't pay attention so much.

    The way I see it, using Dewitt terminology. Each emotion has one of two feelings attached to it. Pleasant and unpleasant. Also smoothness of transition avoids early saturation.

    Our bodies are physical and chemicals need to be manufactured in order to maintain the different degrees of feeling. So food matters.

    Experience of events depends on the availability of these chemicals and the rate at which they can be manufactured and the rates at which they can be emitted/transmitted and absorbed/re-bound.

    Knowing these physics limits, I find it easier to spend more time in the "pleasant zone", and am more grateful for it too.
    Unlike · Reply · 3 · 5 hrs · Edited

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Gosling &Taylor, The Greeks on Pleasure, Chapter 19, “Katastematic and Kinetic Pleasures: ”“Plato’s and Aristotle’s intellectual feats can only win one’s admiration, but a cool look at the results enables one to understand how Epicurus might have seemed more in contact with the subject. For if we are right, Epicurus was not advocating the pursuit of some passionless state which could only be called one of pleasure in order to defend a paradox. Rather he was advocating a life where pain is excluded and we are left with familiar physical pleasures. The resultant life may be simple, but it is straightforwardly pleasant.”
    Like · Reply · 1 · 5 hrs

    Haris Dimitriadis

    Haris Dimitriadis Thanks Cassius. I am really getting embarrased when the central issue of our philosophy is doubted repetitevely and we show to be so compromising and doubtful. There are certain axioms, one of which concerns pleasure, which leave little room for discussion. It is the case of take it or leave it. Pleasure is good, either energetic or static. Ataraxia is a static one but follows the kinetic. It does not come by introversion.
    Unlike · Reply · 4 · 4 hrs

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey I am indeed asking questions Haris. I wasn't doubting pleasure, rather questioning what we mean by pleasure. I hope that is ok. I don't mean to undermine anything.
    Unlike · Reply · 2 · 4 hrs

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Jimmy I share Haris' frustration but it is not at you but at the general state of Epicurean scholarship. Especially if you are in England you will find no one questioning your formulation. But Haris is working on a book and I have been working here too to compile the authorities who are documenting that the general interpretation is incorrect. Unfortunately it takes a lengthy exposition to go through the sources and unwind how we got to the point where the impression has been given that ataraxia is divorced from ordinary pleasure. But the textual material is there and if one reads through the arguments and thinks about the entirety of the philosophy and its focus on he leading role of pleasure I think the errors in the prevailing view become clear. We can address specific questions and try to summarize the situation, but to examine the details of the history of the problem I don't think it's possible to get a good grasp without following the arguments of Gosling and Taylor, Nikolsky, Wenham, DeWitt (and hopefully Haris when his book is published 1f609.png;) )
    Like · Reply · 1 · 4 hrs

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius AmicusImage may contain: text

    Like · Reply · 5 hrs

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey Good stuff, aponia is a further term to be explored.
    Like · Reply · 4 hrs

    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios I like all the pleasant emotions and I don't see a need to try to filter/regulate them. Seek them. They are easy to find.
    Like · Reply · 3 · 5 hrs · Edited

    Jimmy Daltrey

    Jimmy Daltrey What we I am trying to get to s to break down what we mean by pleasant, what Epicurus meant.
    Like · Reply · 4 hrs

    Alexander Rios

    Alexander Rios ok. I suppose I've given up, on word splitting, and fill in the gaps for daily practice, using my Canonic faculties. If I have my needs met, and my predictions of the near future are "more of the same", and I am being prudent (and not an ingrate) then pleasant emotions come easy, by action and by use of memory of past pleasant times, and detection and cheerful dismissal of imagined fearful predictions, that have little foundation.
    Like · Reply · 1 · 4 hrs · Edited

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Norman DeWitt, “Epicurus and His Philosophy,” Chapter 12, the New Hedonism (e.g.: Even at the present day the same objection is raised. For instance, a modern Platonist, ill informed on the true intent of Epicurus, has this to say: “What, in a word, is to be said of a philosophy that begins by regarding pleasure as the only positive good and ends by emptying pleasure of all positive content?” This ignores the fact that this was but one of the definitions of pleasure offered by Epicurus, that he recognized kinetic as well as static pleasures. It ignores also the fact that Epicurus took personal pleasure in public festivals and encouraged his disciples to attend them and that regular banquets were a part of the ritual of the sect. Neither does it take account of the fact that in the judgment of Epicurus those who feel the least need of luxury enjoy it most and that intervals of abstinence enhance the enjoyment of luxury. Thus the Platonic objector puts upon himself the necessity of denying that the moderation of the rest of the year furnishes additional zest to the enjoyment of the Christmas dinner; he has failed to become aware of the Epicurean zeal for “condensing pleasure.”)
    Like · Reply · 1 · 3 hrs

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus I realize we are talking about ataraxia and not the katastematic/kinetic categories, but I believe that when it is seen that pleasure is a faculty of essentially a single nature it is easier to see that ataraxia is a term that describes a method/description of enjoying ordinary mental and physical pleasures: 3)

    Boris Nikolsky, “Epicurus on Pleasure” (“The paper deals with the question of the attribution to Epicurus of the classification of pleasures into ‘kinetic’ and ‘static’. This classification, usually regarded as authentic, confronts us with a number of problems and contradictions. Besides, it is only mentioned in a few sources that are not the most reliable. Following Gosling and Taylor, I believe that the authenticity of the classification may be called in question. The analysis of the ancient evidence concerning Epicurus’ concept of pleasure is made according to the following principle: first, I consider the sources that do not mention the distinction between ‘kinetic’ and ‘static’ pleasures, and only then do I compare them with the other group of texts which comprises reports by Cicero, Diogenes Laertius and Athenaeus. From the former group of texts there emerges a concept of pleasure as a single and not twofold notion, while such terms as ‘motion’ and ‘state’ describe not two different phenomena but only two characteristics of the same phenomenon. On the other hand, the reports comprising the latter group appear to derive from one and the same doxographical tradition, and to be connected with the classification of ethical docrines put forward by the Middle Academy and known as the divisio Carneadea. In conclusion, I argue that the idea of Epicurus’ classification of pleasures is based on a misinterpretation of Epicurus’ concept in Academic doxography, which tended to contrapose it to doctrines of other schools, above all to the Cyrenaics’ views.“)
    Like · Reply · 1 · 3 hrs

    Cassius Amicus

    Cassius Amicus Jimmy I should also give you this link, where I have collected my largest list of cites on the nature of the goal of pleasurable livinghttps://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=http%3…Jqv9p3bStOcZPac


    Full Cup Fullness of Pleasure Model
    Link to Larger Version of Graphic It is observed too that in his treatise On the Ethical End he [Epicurus] writes in…
    NEWEPICUREAN.COM

    Like · Reply · Remove Preview · 2 · 3 hrs


    Elli Pensa Jimmy Daltrey wrote : <<For Epicurus Ataraxia is the greatest good>> And Epicurus answers to him again and again : Hey my boy, "I do not know how I could conceive of the good without the pleasures of taste, of sex, of hearing, and without the pleasing motions caused by the sight of bodies and forms". 1f61b.png:P
    Like · Reply · 19 mins

    Elli Pensa

    Elli Pensa Don't think it unnatural that when the body cries out, the soul cries also. The body says don't be hungry, don't be thirsty, don't be cold. It is difficult for the soul to prevent these cries, and dangerous for it to ignore the commands of nature because of attachment to its usual independence.(Epicurus).
    Like · Reply · 17 mins

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