Early essay on Cyrenaic ethics and epistemology From what TGW wrote of the Cyrenaic view of the good, it would seem perfectly consistent for my good to be your bad. — Marchesk
This is a little tricky, because the Greeks don't typically speak in terms of 'my good' versus 'your good;' they just speak of the good. If pleasure is the good, it isn't
my good, although it may be a good that I am undergoing rather than someone else, and so one that I have a special epistemic relation to.
What is true is that one individual thing may have good and bad consequences, i.e. may be instrumentally good in some ways and bad in others, and that these goods and bads may be the pleasures and pains of separate people. But the only things that are intrinsically good and bad are pleasures and pains, and here it makes no sense to say that someone's good is someone else's bad.
If it causes me pleasure to torture you, and all goods are subjective and only definable by each individual, — Marchesk
Goods are not subjective on the Cyrenaic view in any fundamental way: pleasure is good
tout court. There is a subjectivity in that pleasure is dependent on the existence of what we might call a subject, i.e. an undergoer or mover experiencing the pleasure. But this does not mean that it is in any way a matter of
opinion or subject to substantive faultless
disagreement which things are good and which not, nor does it mean that anyone ever
defines what is good.
then there is nothing wrong for me to torture you, as far as I'm concerned. — Marchesk
It's important to remember that it most Greek ethics there is no 'as far as I'm concerned' as far as the good goes, though there may be goods or bads that disproportionately affect some people over others. Also, the term 'wrong,' or some equivalent, is not used to express these views.