Living for Pleasure: An Epicurean Guide to Life

Front Cover
Oxford University Press, 2023 - Philosophy - 307 pages
If we all want happiness and pleasure so much, then why are we so bad at getting it?

Pleasure feels amazing! Anxiety, however, does not. The Ancient Greek Philosopher Epicurus rolled these two strikingly intuitive claims into a simple formula for happiness and well-being--pursue pleasure without causing yourself anxiety. But wait, is that even possible? Can humans achieve lasting pleasure without suffering anxiety about failure and loss? Epicurus thinks we can, at least once we learn to pursue pleasure thoughtfully.

In Living for Pleasure, philosopher Emily Austin offers a lively, jargon-free tour of Epicurean strategies for diminishing anxiety, achieving satisfaction, and relishing joys. Epicurean science was famously far ahead of its time, and Austin shows that so was its ethics and psychology. Epicureanism can help us make and keep good friends, prepare for suffering, combat imposter syndrome, build trust, recognize personal limitations, value truth, cultivate healthy attitudes towards money and success, manage political anxiety, develop gratitude, savor food, and face death.

Readers will walk away knowing more about an important school of philosophy, but moreover understanding how to get what they want in life--happiness--without the anxiety of striving for it.

 

Contents

1 Maybe Were Doing It Wrong
1
2 Epicureanism the Original Cast
8
3 Happiness Theirs and Ours
20
4 Natural Hedonism
28
5 What Do You Want?
42
6 Why Cant We Be Friends?
54
7 Let Me Be Frank
66
8 The Pleasures of Virtue
80
16 Of Sex Love and Harmless Pleasure
171
17 Building the Tranquil Child
180
18 Foodies Dinner Parties and Wine Snobs
191
19 Science and Anxiety
202
20 That Old Time Religion
211
21 Experiencing Death
222
22 Pandemics and Other Comforting Horrors
232
23 The Fourfold Remedy
241

9 Imposter Syndrome
92
10 Wealth and What It Costs
103
Politics and Power
116
The Tyranny of the Like
128
13 Ambition Work and Success
137
14 Greed for Life
145
15 Misfortune and Resilience
156
24 Practicing Epicureanism
252
Acknowledgments
267
Notes
269
Suggested Further Reading
283
References
285
Index
299
Copyright

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About the author (2023)

Emily A. Austin is Professor of Philosophy at Wake Forest University. She earned her Ph.D. from Washington University in St. Louis, specializing in Ancient Greek Philosophy.

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