javi2541997
Well, are those who define the good as pleasure infected with any less confusion of thought than the others? Or are not they in like manner compelled to admit that there are bad pleasures [ἡδονὰς εἶναι κακάς, hēdonàs eînai kakás, i.e. admit "pleasures to be bad"]? — Plato VI, Republic II, Book VI, 505c, translated by Paul Shorey, Loeb Classical Library, Harvard U. Press, 1935, 1970, pp.88-89)
unenlightened
Solon, according to Herodotus.Call no man happy until he is dead.
Metaphysician Undercover
What are the bad pleasures according to Plato? — javi2541997
javi2541997
It is uncontroversial that pleasure can lead to pain, and happiness to misery. — unenlightened
There is a metaphysical distinction, sometimes made, between aesthetics and ethics. The principal difference is that "the good" of ethics is always sought for the sake of a higher end, a further good. Therefore there is always a reason why it is deemed as good. "It is good because...". On the other hand, the pleasure of aesthetics is sought for the sake of itself, there is no further end. This is known as "beauty", and there is no rational answer as to why it is good or pleasant. — Metaphysician Undercover
Plato demonstrated that pleasure is not properly opposed to pain. — Metaphysician Undercover
If we take this as our guide, the highest good is that pleasure which is not at all opposed to pain, then the lowest good (most bad) would be the type of pleasure which is most readily opposed to pain. — Metaphysician Undercover
Metaphysician Undercover
Interesting. What do you think, MU? Is pleasure related to ethics or aesthetics? — javi2541997
Yes, exactly. I get this from Plato. But I think it is a bit subjective when he debates about good, bad, pain and pleasure. It seems that pleasure and pain need to be experienced by the subject, and then they conclude if something is bad or good. For example, smoking. In my humble opinion, I think smoking is a bad pleasure (following Plato's points) but completely objective because it is scientifically demonstrated that smoking kills and causes cancer. Therefore, smoking is a bad objective pleasure that does not depend on subjectiveness. — javi2541997
I can't disagree with this, but I consider it a bit ambiguous. What are the boundaries of pain and good? There are people who enjoy sadomasochism. Is this sexual practice objectively good or bad even though it clearly implies pain? — javi2541997
javi2541997
Pleasure is definitely related to aesthetics. — Metaphysician Undercover
The question is how these two are related to ethics. The two extremes would be, one, that they are completely separate and unrelated, and the other that ethics is completely determined by pleasure and aesthetics. I would think that reality is somewhere in between. — Metaphysician Undercover
Smoking is an immediate pleasure, but reason informs us that it conflicts with the long term, less immediate desires. Since the long term is more highly prioritized, we need to resist from smoking for the sake of the other. Then smoking is a "bad pleasure" because it conflicts with the other which is more highly sought after. — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't quite understand what you are asking here. — Metaphysician Undercover
hypericin
What I consider a good pleasure, such as listening to opera, may be insufferable to you. According to this, pleasure seems to be a purely subjective concept. — javi2541997
javi2541997
Not necessarily. Opera is not itself pleasure, it is something that brings pleasure to you. If it is insufferable to me, it brings me no pleasure. The stimulus is not the response. Different stimuli may be needed to bring about the same pleasurable response in each of us. — hypericin
And so pleasure is an objective feature of the biology of everything with a mind. — hypericin
Metaphysician Undercover
Since Plato argued that pleasure is unrelated to pain and this determined the "good", what do "pleasure" and "pain" mean? — javi2541997
Do you think that their understanding of these concepts depends on each of us because it is a purely subjective experience? What I may consider as "painful", you could feel otherwise, and vice versa. So, when I read that paragraph by Plato, I thought in the first place that pleasure, good and pain are "universals" and they do not have objective existence. They are dependent upon how we experience them. But is there the possibility that pain and pleasure exist in an objective perspective? — javi2541997
javi2541997
Let me clarify what I believe that Plato did. He did not argue that pleasure is unrelated to pain, some pleasures very much seem to be related to pains. But I think he demonstrated that since pleasures come in different types, if there is a type which is not related to pain, that type could be related to good. What I believe he explicitly argued was that as long as we understand pleasure as the opposite of pain, then it is impossible that pleasure can be equated with good. — Metaphysician Undercover
Pleasure and pain are definitely subjective because when I feel pleasure or pain you do not necessarily feel what I feel. — Metaphysician Undercover
There may be a type of pleasure though, which when a person feels it, it is subjective, felt only by that person, but it is good for everyone. Then that good could be objective. This, I believe is the pleasure we get from being morally good. Like the pleasure from being a philanthropist for example, the specific pleasure is felt only by that person, and is subjective, but the good is related to all. — Metaphysician Undercover
hypericin
Therefore, you agree with the points of Epicurus and other philosophers who stated that pleasure is subjective. Since something (like opera, for instance) may be considered pleasure/non-pleasure at the same time by different perceivers, then music is dependent upon subjectiveness. — javi2541997
And furthermore, are there insufferable experiences which are good? An appointment with the dentist, perhaps? — javi2541997
javi2541997
javra
Nonetheless, I have some questions that I would like to share and debate with you:
What are the bad pleasures according to Plato? Does this really depend on each of us and how we understand Hedonism?
Are there objective pleasures? Can these be drawn from the boundaries of good and bad? — javi2541997
180 Proof
I don't know about Plato's mumbo-jumbo, but Epicurus thinks "bad pleasures" are ones which cause or increase pain (or fear (i.e. suffering)) because they are either unnecessary (e.g. luxuries, excesses) or unnatural (e.g. wealth, power, fame) in contrast to good pleasures which reduce pain (or fear (i.e. suffering)) and are simple but necessary (e.g. food, shelter, play, friendship, community). I think tranquility, not the "pleasure" (i.e. euphoria) of hedonists like the Cyrenaics, is the Epicurean (or disutilitarian) goal. :flower:What are the bad pleasures according to Plato? — javi2541997
javra
I don't know about Plato, but Epicurus thinks "bad pleasures" are ones which cause or increase pain because they are either unncessary (e.g. luxuries, excesses) or unnatural (e.g. wealth, power, fame) in contrast to good pleasures which reduce pain and are simple but necessary (e.g. food, shelter, play, friendship, community). — 180 Proof
javi2541997
javi2541997
From the eponymous Greek Hedonists, the doctrine was continued by Epicurus and survives in the significant modern school of Utilitarianism, with agreement that pleasure is the only intrinsic good. — Kelley Ross.
Moliere
Going by Epicurus's thoughts as just outlined by you, running marathons would then be bad, this because they result in increased unnecessary pain. As does weightlifting, and a good number of other human activities often deemed to be eudemonia-increasing. The altruism to running into a house on fire and thereby risking grave unnecessary pain (to not even get into the risk of mutilation and death) so as to rescue another's life would then be bad and hence unethical? — javra
No pleasure is a bad thing in itself, but some pleasures are only obtainable at the cost of excessive troubles. — Diogenes Laertius, Epicurus' Principle doctrines
javra
"bad pleasures" are ones which cause or increase pain because they are either unncessary (e.g. luxuries, excesses) or unnatural (e.g. wealth, power, fame) — 180 Proof
180 Proof
javra
That's not quite right. — Moliere
javra
I already understood, thanks to your explanation and MU and hypercin, that pleasure is subjective. — javi2541997
javra
Moliere
But my post was in direct relation to how Epicureanism was outlined by 180 Proof. And with that description I yet disagree. — javra
javra
I thought his summation good enough, basically -- in a rough and dirty way, sure that's what the bad pleasures are, and the good pleasure is ataraxia and aponia, like the link he linked says. — Moliere
javi2541997
javra
As you stated, eudaimonia is hardly objective. — javi2541997
180 Proof
I don't recall stating that. In fact, I believe eudaimonia (i.e. flourishing) is objective — acquiring adaptive habits (virtues) and unlearning maladaptive habits (vices) — e.g. the Capability approach of M. Nussbaum & A. Sen.As you stated, eudaimonia is hardly objective. — javi2541997
Moliere
OK, I don't though. For one thing, I don't agree with Epicurus that everyone ought to be an ascetic like he was. — javra
For starters, just because most cases of romantic love lead to pains that would not have otherwise occurred does not to me entail that therefore romantic love ought to be shunned by one and all as a form of wisdom.
Maybe this is all differences of opinion. So be it then.
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