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Transcript

The philosophy of happiness, explained in 10 minutes

Jonny Thomson explains the 3 pillars of happiness from 2,500 years of philosophy

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Timestamps:
0:00 - What is the end point?
1:46 - The philosophies of happiness
2:31 - 3 pillars of happiness
3:00 - Happiness ≠ pleasure
4:40 - Moderation
5:53 - Virtue
8:08 - Applying the 3 pillars

Transcript:

What is the end point?

So in his "Nicomachean Ethics," Aristotle argues that everything we do in life is for some further purpose. So I go to school to get an education, I get an education to get a job, and I get a job so that I get money to buy nice things, and so on and so on. But the question Aristotle asks is what is the end point of all this? What lies at the top of the ladder? And for Aristotle, the point of all human life is to reach happiness. I think it's so elusive because the term itself is so laden. We associate happiness as being this beaming smile with a selfie on social media, but I think happiness is not a smiling face, it's more a smiling soul. But why do we find it confusing? Why is it hard to understand? I think Daoism offers a really good analogy here. So imagine life as like a dense, thorny forest, and in the middle of this forest is a well-paved superhighway. And it's easy to walk along that path, but there are other paths, but these paths go through swamps, they go through thorns, they go up and down hills, and they are difficult, and I think happiness is a little bit like that. There's certain paths to happiness which feel right and are right, but there are so many different paths with their different sirens' calls which attract us, and I think we don't realize we're on the wrong path often until it's too late and we find the going really difficult.

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Hi, my name's Jonny Thomson. I'm the staff writer at Big Think and I'm the author of the books "Mini Philosophy" and "Mini Big Ideas" and I run the social media account called Mini Philosophy. So I started the Mini Philosophy project about seven years ago, and the aim was to try to teach philosophy to everybody. The idea was to duck and weave my way through the different philosophical traditions and different philosophical schools.

The philosophies of happiness

So if you imagine the history of philosophy as some kind of big heat map, there are certain themes start to emerge, and they're all to do with happiness, they're all to do with how to live the best life and how to be a good person. You have epicureanism, you have cynicism, you have stoicism, and you have skepticism. And they're all trying to sell their different version of happiness, and they're literally trying to sell to their disciples that their way is the best way to be happy. And that interested me. But if you zoom out, you do start to notice certain commonalities and certain themes.

So if we imagine happiness as being on the right path, if we follow the Daoist metaphor, then the question we've got to ask ourselves is if we are unhappy, what's going on there? And the question then is about finding the right path again. There are certain lights which emerge in the history of philosophy and theology as well which are meant to act as beacons or guides which we can walk towards. It's found in Confucius's idea of right virtue, it's found in Aristotle's Nicomachean ethics, and it's found in Al-Ghazali's idea that the right way is in accordance with Allah. So if we are unhappy, then we should work towards these lights, and I've identified three lights or what I like to call pillars of happiness.

1. Happiness ≠ pleasure

The first pillar or like number one is the idea that happiness is not measured by pleasure. So the ancient Greeks had a lot of different words for happiness, and one of them is hedonia. And hedonia is what we might want to call simple pleasure. It's the big night out with some friends, but it's also drinking a herbal tea on the sofa. It's quite easy to measure and it's quite easy to understand because it's an emotional affect. Eudaimonia though is a much harder word to understand. It's often translated as "flourishing." And the reason why it's difficult to understand is that it's often understood in reverse. So there are many moments in life where we look back on our experiences and think they were really hard at the time, but actually we were supremely happy. For example, raising young kids or even school can be quite hard at the time, but we look back and think, "Those were moments when I was deeply, supremely happy." So the idea that pleasure is not an essential ingredient to happiness appears in many different philosophical schools. So this idea is central to Buddhism. So Buddhists tend to define pleasure as being a desire satisfier. So I want a drink of water, and so I reach for the water and I drink it, and that gives me a pleasure. But the problem of course is that this is an unwinnable game. Every day we have millions and millions of desires, and there's no way we can satisfy them all. It's like a game of whack-a-mole.

If we're to be happy at all, it has to be found outside of this notion of pleasure. We have to step beyond hedonia. But the problem is that we risk going too far. It's a logical fallacy to say that just because pleasure doesn't equal happiness, that suffering therefore must. And it's a risk that we fetishize suffering, that we enjoy this kind of masochistic misery and we see that as essential to flourishing. But of course, that's not true.

2. Moderation

And the second pillar, the second light which emerges across all these traditions is moderation, that we have to find a middle way. It's essential to Daoism. And the idea is that life is not black or white, but rather it's a confused and confusing cocktail of things. Everything is gray. So yin tends to represent the dark, the mysterious, the elusive, water, fluidity, and yang tends to represents the exciting, the passionate, the loud, the sunny, and truth. And so for Daoists, we have to find the middle path, which is walking between yin and yang. But this idea of moderation is also seen in everyday life, and it's in the Swedish lifestyle concept of lagom, which means "just the right amount." And there's two elements to it, really. The first element is a kind of fair usage policy where if I take all of the cookies in the cookie jar, then it leaves none for anybody else. And so what I do will affect other people. The second element of lagom is a kind of recognition that sometimes less really is more. And so for example, if I'm having a coffee with a friend, that's fun, that's enjoyable, but if I have seven coffees, it's not so much. And this idea of moderation and balance appears again and again through different threads in philosophy.

3. Virtue

But the third thing that I notice appearing is the idea that happiness is an unavoidable, emergent state of goodness, that you cannot be truly and meaningfully happy unless you are also virtuous. But of course, this raises a problem, and the problem is, what does "virtuous" mean? Because if we zoom in on any different culture and any different time, what people define as right and wrong and good and bad will change from person to person, from philosopher to philosopher. So if you look at the history of philosophy, what you find is that certain virtues have always been called virtues and certain vices have always been called vices. I think we can identify five.

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The first is altruism and the vice egoism. So this is seen in Augustine's code for monks, and it's seen in Islam's zakat. It's there in Peter Singer and Immanuel Kant and Thomas Aquinas. And the idea is a sense of other-regardedness, charity and caring for other people. So the second is kindness and cruelty. So this is best represented by the golden mean, which most people are familiar with this from the gospels, which is "do unto others as you'd have them do unto you," but it's not just in the gospels. It's seen in Sanskrit, in Tamil, in Persian, in ancient Greece, and in the Vedas. But it's also seen in modern times in Kant's first categorical imperative and in Aquinas's natural law: be good and kind to other people. And the third virtue/vice is justice and injustice. I think if you put Plato and Mencius and John Rawls in the same room, they would agree about the need for justice, which is the idea of some kind of retribution for wrongdoers. The fourth virtue/vice is wisdom and ignorance. Socrates famously wrote that, "The unexamined life is not worth living." And the Buddha encouraged his disciples to meditate at great length on the universe. I can't think of any major philosopher who's been treated seriously for long who advocates for ignorance. And the fifth virtue/vice is humility and arrogance. And I think this has two strands really. The first is a kind of intellectual humility, which is represented best by John Stuart Mill, and the second is a kind of existential humility, which is represented by the religions. It's in Karl Barth, it's in Maimonides, and the word "Islam" literally translates as "surrender to Allah." This is the idea that you are not the center of the universe. There are things outside of your understanding which are far more powerful and which we occasionally have to bow to.

Applying the 3 pillars

So taking all these together, how can we actually apply these three pillars to our day-to-day life? And I think for pillar number one, which is the idea that happiness cannot be measured by pleasure, I think a really good example of this is parenting. If you ever go on social media and you see a reel or a post about a new parent, it's inevitably moaning about something: Their sleep-deprived nights or the germs or their kids aren't eating anything, and it's full of stress and what appears to be misery. But then if you commented on those posts saying, "Well, why did you bother having kids in the first place?" or "Why do kids make you unhappy?" often parents will reply, "I'm the happiest I've ever been." And I think parenting is an example of looking back at a stage of your life and thinking, "All of the ingredients might have been pretty hard in themselves, but as a whole, I was deeply, existentially happy." Pillar number two is the idea of moderation in all things, and I think this is best seen in dieting. So most diets end within a month, if not weeks, and most new year's resolutions end pretty quickly. It's "I'm gonna go to the gym every day and run half marathons" or "I'm going to give up chocolate" or "I'm never gonna drink alcohol ever again."

And they fail because they are so extreme. And the best diets in history allow a degree of flexibility and moderation. So dieting when it's done at these extremes does work for some people, no doubt, but for most people, dieting is best when it happens in the middle way. So pillar number three is that happiness requires goodness, which might seem ridiculous to lots of people, because we can point to people who seem to be pretty cruel or immoral and yet they seem to be also very happy. But the evolutionary psychologist Robin Dunbar did a study into gossip, and he argued that gossip is a kind of social culling where we talk about the cheaters and the liars and the thieves in our lives so we can shun them from society. Inversely, those who are friendly and kind will be welcomed into society.

So what we can conclude is those who are kind and those who are friendly will have friends and those who have friends are also happy. What I find really interesting is if you zoom out and look at the history of philosophy, you see these three pillars emerging, and they act essentially as a diagnostic tool. If you feel you are unhappy in life, you can look at these pillars and think, "Which of these three am I not meeting? Is it that I'm confusing a hard patch of my life with being unhappy? Is it that I'm going to two extremes? Or is it that possibly I'm not being as good as I could be?" If we recognize that those are the problems in our life, we can take steps to fix it.


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