РефератыИностранный языкHeHedonism Essay Research Paper HedonismWebster

Hedonism Essay Research Paper HedonismWebster

Hedonism Essay, Research Paper


Hedonism


Webster’s dictionary defines hedonism as “the


ethical doctrine that pleasure, variously conceived of


in terms of happiness of the individual or of society,


is the principal good and the proper aim of action” or


“the theory that a person always acts is such a way as


to seek pleasure and avoid pain.” With this definition


in mind, and with further examination of John Stuart


Mill’s theory on hedonism, I am going to argue that


hedonism is not an exclusive or distinct way of


thinking. In fact, I think that with the exception of


possibly a few people, most people are very


hedonistically inclined.


“Hedonistic utilitarians identify happiness with


feeing pleasure and avoiding pain, meaning that the more


an individual enjoys pleasure and avoids pain, the


happier that individual is” (phil.tamu.edu). Now, is


this really a new and profound thought? If you avoid


pain, you will lead a happier life? With a few


exceptions, I don’t know many people who see pain as


enjoyment. Most people I know have made it a point to


enjoy themselves in so me fasion or


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another, and that doesn’t include the enjoyment of pain.


“Mill’s overall subject is the right of the


indivieual to think and act for himeself of herself.


For Mill this does not mean the right to think and act


as you please (Castell 360). Eventhough Mill encouraged


independent thought and actions, he did not justify


running around and doing whatever you liked. According


to the Hedonic Society, what they call Enlightened


Hedonism (”a naturalistic and humanistic lifestance


advocation the ration cultivation of pleasure and


happiness for all”) can be stated in six principles:


1. Knowledge is gained through a reasoned study of


all available evidence.


2. In the absence of conclusive evidence for a


supernatural, ethics and morality must be based on our


living in the natural world.


3. Pleasure and pain are our natural means for


determining what is beneficial or harmful to life.


4. Those actions are best which lead to the


greatest pleasure and happiness, or the least pain and


suffering, in the long term for all concerned.


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5. Our lives are made most happy and fulfilling by


cultivating the higher pleasures of intellectual


development, aesthetic appreciation and creativity, and


social bonds of friendship, family and romantic love.


6. Happiness is best attained in an atmosphere of


freedom, tolerance, nonviolence and diversity.


The Hedonic society also states that the ethics of


enlightened hedonism is a positive, dynamic and life-


affirming alternative to traditional religious and


political dogmas.


In today’s terms, when you hear someone speak of


hedonism, your mind automatically goes to associating


sex, orgasms, and all other types of physical pleasure


with the term hedonism. The important thing to keep in


mind, however is that hedonism does not just include


physical pleasure. It is possible to strive to achieve


happiness and excitement, and at the same time avoid


sadness and anxiety. This is also a hedonistic way of


thought. Hedonism is not the pursuit purely physical.


It is possible to be intellectually hedonistic as well.


And, Hedonism is not based solely on the individual. It


is to be the greatest amount of good possible for the


greatest amount of people.


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So just because you want to something, and fulfill


your o

riginal desire/want/need, doesn’t mean that it is


right to do it. You have to take into account what


would benefit others as well. “By each of us going


immediately for that which we most want, which would


give us the most pleasure, is for the greatest possible


good to be accomplished…(Stanford).”


Mill says that the ideal way to be is a little bit


of both physically and intellectually hedonistic. He


introduces the Competent Judge Test (CJT) to battle


common objections he faces against hedonistic


utilitarianism. The objection stems from the


philosophical controversy between bodily (eating,


drinking, and sex, but also things like exercise) and


intellectual (art, literature, philosophy, and science)


pleasures, and the relative value of each of those


pleasures (phil.tamu). “Since hedonistic utilitarian


define happiness in terms of pleasure and the absence of


pain, they are open to the objection that their view


give human beings’ lives no higher purpose than that of


any animal. Mill calls this ‘the doctrine of swine


objection.’ …Mill reasons that if what gives a human


being pleasure (and/or pain) is radically different than


what gives it to an animal, then what counts as human


happiness will be radically different” (phil.tamu).


Intellectual pleasures are superior to the physical


pleasures, and Mill says that


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his CJT proves it. “Of tow pleasures, if there be one


to which all of almost all who have experience of both


give a decided preference, irrespective or any feeling


of moral obligation to prefer it, that is the more


desirable pleasure” (phil.tamu).


Mill has four different components that are a part


of the testing of qualitative superiority;


1) Who the competent judges are; 2) What kind of


majority of them must give; 3) What kind of preference


to one kind of pleasure over another for it to be judged


the higher quality pleasure; and


4) What this qualitative difference implies about the


relative value of pleasure of the two kinds.


He also presents the Four Steps of CJT; 1)


Identify the competent judges; 2) See if any of them


prefer X over Y; 3) Ask if the preference for X over Y


is shared by certain characteristics;


4) If #3 is true, then we are justified in concluding


that X is somehow superior (phil.tamu).


Mill says that if you substitute intellectual


pleasures for “X” and bodily pleasures for “Y,” then “X”


is “qualitatively superior” to “Y.” However, like I


stated above, each person in their own aspect has some


hedonism in them somewhere. I would argue that in order


to have a relatively balanced life, you would include


both physical


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and intellectual aspects of your life. Whether or not


you would be labeled a “Hedonist” would remain to be


seen. If you incorporate the greater needs of others


into your individual immediate needs, then technically,


yes, that would be Hedonism. But, I would venture to


say that you would be labeled “a nice person.”


Castell, Alburey, et al., Introduction to Moern


Philosophy: Examining the Human Condition. (New


Jersey: Prentice Hall, 2001).


“Hedonism.” Stanford University (online)


www.stanford.edu/~quixote/philosophies.htm#hedonism*


. (12/03/2001).


“John Stuart Mill.” unknown (online) *www-/


phil.tamu.edu/~gary/intro/lecture.mill_1.html.


(12/03/2001).


“What is Enlightened Hedonism?” Hedonic Society


(online) *www.hedonicsociety.org/custom/html*.


(12/03/2001).

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