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Epicurus

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Title: Epicurus


1
Epicurus
  • Biography
  • Historical and Political Context
  • Philosophy

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341270 B.C.
2
Epicurus in Context
  • Out of the 3 ancient Greek philosophers we are
    studying Plato, Aristotle and Epicurus, I think
    that Epicurus comes closest in his conception of
    happiness to our modern assumptions and ideas of
    what the Good Life is. Of the ancients Epicurus
    is the one who resonates most closely with a
    contemporary common world view.
  • This can only be accepted if you think that we in
    modern western democracies generally live under
    the influence of the humanist tradition that has
    been dominant since the 17th Century.
  • If humanism can be defined as a moral philosophy
    that believes humans can live a moral, happy and
    fulfilled life on the basis of human reason and
    experience without relying on the supernatural,
    then Epicurus can be seen as a precursor to our
    modern conception of the good life.

3
Epicurus Biography
  • Epicurus was born on February 4th, 341 B.C., on
    the island of Samos in the Aegean Sea just off
    the west coast of what is now Turkey (a region
    called Ionia).
  • A a youth he encountered the teachings of Plato
    and Democritus
  • In 321 B.C Epicurus was drafted into the Athenian
    army.
  • In 310, Epicurus founded a school on the Island
    of Mitylene.
  • In 305, Epicurus founded a school in Athens The
    Garden
  • In 270 died in Athens and followers continued his
    work across the Mediterranean for centuries.
  • Note
  • We are still discovering Epicurean philosophy
    today near tPompeii at Herculaneum on the Bay of
    Naples, Italy. See the following site for more
    information on this project
  • http//www.humnet.ucla.edu/humnet/classics/philode
    mus/philhome.htm

4
Epicurus Biography
Mediterranean Map
Ionian Map
5
Epicurus Historical and Political Context
  • The early Hellenistic period of Greek History in
    which Epicurus grew up in was tumultuous with
    political instability.
  • During Epicurus's childhood, Alexander of Macedon
    made his remarkable conquest of Greece, the
    Persian Empire, and Egypt. Greek culture was
    spread into various cities as far east as
    Afghanistan and Pakistan. While Alexander died in
    323 B.C., the successor states that eventually
    emerged out of the wars among Alexander's
    generals retained a strong element of Greek
    language and culture, particularly among the
    upper strata of society.

6
Epicurus Philosophy
  • Epicurus's Letter to Menoeceus illustrates his
    general philosophy
  • His world-view is optimistic and explains
  • how philosophy can liberate one from
  • anxieties and can teach one how to find
    happiness.
  • Physics is an atomistic materialism.
  • Ethics is a rational hedonism. He emphasizes the
    importance of pleasure and the moderation of our
    desires through reason.

7
Epicurus Philosophy Metaphysics
  • Epicurus believes that the basic constituents of
    the world are atoms as per the pre-Socratic
    philosopher, Democritus 460-370 BC.
  • 2. Atoms are, for Epicurus indivisible,
    microscopic bits of extended matter with physical
    properties moving in empty space.
  • 3. Ordinary objects are conglomerations of
    atoms.
  • The properties of macroscopic bodies and all of
    the events we see occurring can be explained in
    terms of the collisions, reboundings, and
    entanglements of atoms.
  • (from Epicurus on Freedom by Tim O'Keefe
    Georgia State University 2005)

8
Epicurus Metaphysics Continued
  • Epicurus argued to replace the teleological
    (goal-based) explanations of natural phenomena
    with mechanistic ones.
  • But Epicurus moved away from the determinism of
    Democritus. Epicurus allowed for free will by
    postulating that atoms sometimes behave with a
    swerve that allows a randomness to their
    behaviour. E.g. Milo will wrestle (Cicero)
  • Epicurus is also against the intrinsic teleology
    of Aristotle. Teeth appear to be well-designed
    for the purpose of chewing. Aristotle thinks that
    this apparent teleology in nature cannot be
    eliminated, and that the functioning of the parts
    of organisms must be explained by appealing to
    how they contribute to the functioning of the
    organism as a whole.
  • Epicurus, however, tries to explain away this
    apparent teleology in nature in a proto-Darwinian
    way, as the result of a process of natural
    selection.
  • (from http//www.iep.utm.edu/e/epicur.htm)

9
Epicurus Philosophy
Optimistic about Philosophy as the way to
Happiness
Let no one be slow to seek wisdom when he is
young nor weary in the search of it when he has
grown old. For no age is too early or too late
for the health of the soul. And to say that the
season for studying philosophy has not yet come,
or that it is past and gone, is like saying that
the season for happiness is not yet or that it is
now no more.
10
Epicurus Letter to Menoeceous - Overview
  • Four Topics on the Good Life
  • Death
  • Gods
  • Pleasure
  • Prudence
  • Each topic is dealt with a mixture of
  • psychology and materialism and reflects
    questions
  • and concerns which are still very relevant today.
  • e.g.
  • free from the fear of death
  • freedom from anxiety
  • freedom from desires

11
Epicurus Letter to Menoeceous - Death
  • Accustom yourself to believe that death is
    nothing to us
  • Does Epicurus offer an argument for this?

12
Epicurus Letter to Menoeceous - Death
  • Death the most of awful of evils, is nothing to
    us, seeing that, when we are, death is not come,
    and, when death is come, we are not. It is
    nothing , then, either to the living or to the
    dead, for with the living it is not and the dead
    exist no longer.

13
Epicurus Letter to Menoeceous - Gods
  • Does Epicurus accept the existence of gods?
  • 2 aspects evident in his Letter.
  • He has a personal idealisation of God. He
    dismisses the commonly held views of the gods and
    the mythological explanations of natural
    phenomena as the will of the gods.
  • For truly there are gods, and knowledge of them
    is evident but they are not such as the
    multitude believe, seeing that people do not
    steadfastly maintain the notions they form
    respecting them.

14
Epicurus Letter to Menoeceous - Gods
  • 2. Epicurus does not wish for us to accept a God
    that intervenes in our life. Epicurus is similar
    to Aristotle, where necessity should not absolve
    one of the responsibility for ones actions. And
    this is the same criticism Epicurus has of
    Democritus mechanistic determinism.
  • For he sees that necessity destroys
    responsibility and that chance or fortune is
    inconstant whereas our own actions are free, and
    it is to them that praise and blame naturally
    attach.
  • However, Epicurus views differs from the
    Aristotelian doctrine which states that in
    addition to man's capabilities to attain
    eudaimonia, one would also need some good fortune
    in order to achieve happiness.

15
Epicurus Letter to Menoeceous - Pleasure
  • Pleasure is our first and kindred good.
  • Epicurus' ethics starts from the Aristotelian
    view that the highest good is what is valued for
    its own sake, and not for the sake of anything
    else, and Epicurus agrees with Aristotle where
    happiness is the highest good.
  • However, he disagrees with Aristotle and Plato
    by identifying happiness with pleasure. Epicurus'
    ethical hedonism is based upon his psychological
    hedonism. Everything we do, claims Epicurus, we
    do for the sake ultimately of gaining pleasure
    for ourselves.

16
Epicurus Letter to Menoeceous - Pleasure
  • And since pleasure is our first and native
    good, for that reason we do not choose every
    pleasure whatever, but often pass over many
    pleasures when a greater annoyance ensues from
    them.
  • Although all pleasures are good and all pains
    evil, Epicurus says that not all pleasures are
    choice worthy or all pains to be avoided.

17
Epicurus Letter to Menoeceous - Pleasure
  • If pleasure results from getting what you want
    (desire-satisfaction) and pain from not getting
    what you want (desire-frustration), then there
    are two strategies you can pursue with respect to
    any given desire you can either strive to
    fulfill the desire, or you can try to eliminate
    the desire.
  • For the most part Epicurus advocates the second
    strategy, that of paring your desires down to a
    minimum core, which are then easily satisfied.

18
Epicurus Letter to Menoeceous - Pleasure
  • Epicurus distinguishes between 3 types of
    desires
  • Natural and necessary desires
  • Natural but non-necessary desires
  • "vain and empty" desires.

19
Epicurus Letter to Menoeceous - Pleasure
  • 1. Natural and Necessary Desires
  • e.g. food and shelter.
  • Epicurus thinks that these desires are easy to
    satisfy, and bring great pleasure when satisfied.
    Furthermore, they are necessary for life, and
    they are naturally limited that is, if one is
    hungry, it only takes a limited amount of food to
    fill the stomach, after which the desire is
    satisfied. Epicurus says that one should try to
    fulfill these desires.

20
Epicurus Letter to Menoeceous - Pleasure
  • 2. Natural but Non-Necessary Desires
  • e.g. luxury food.
  • Although food is needed for survival, one does
    not need a particular type of food to survive.
    Thus, despite his hedonism, Epicurus advocates a
    surprisingly ascetic way of life.
  • Plain fare gives as much pleasure as a costly
    diet.

21
Epicurus Letter to Menoeceous - Pleasure
  • 3. Vain and Empty" Desires
  • e.g. Power, wealth and fame
  • They are difficult to satisfy, in part because
    they have no natural limit. If one desires wealth
    or power, no matter how much one gets, it is
    always possible to get more, and the more one
    gets, the more one wants. These desires are not
    natural to human beings, but inculcated by
    society and by false beliefs about what we need
    e.g., believing that having power will bring us
    security from others. Epicurus thinks that these
    desires should be eliminated.

22
Epicurus Letter to Menoeceous - Pleasure
  • When we say, then, that pleasure is the end and
    aim, we do not mean the pleasures of the prodigal
    or the pleasures of sensuality, as we are
    understood to do by some through ignorance,
    prejudice or wilful misrepresentation. For this
    reason prudence is a more precious thing even
    that the other virtues.
  • One should use ones sober judgment (prudence) to
    calculate what is in one's long-term
    self-interest, and abstain from short-term
    pleasures.

23
What advice would you take from Epicurus for the
GOOD LIFE?
Welcome to The Garden
24
Epicurus
  • Bibliography
  • Epicurus on Freedom by Tim O'Keefe Georgia State
    University 2005
  • 2. http//www.iep.utm.edu/e/epicur.htm
  • 3. http//www.humnet.ucla.edu/humnet/classics/phil
    odemus/philhome.htm
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