Ethics
Hedonism
Pleasure as the highest good — and the variations of this ancient view
Hedonism is the philosophical view that pleasure is the highest good — the ultimate end. Many forms exist. (1) Psychological hedonism — humans are motivated by pleasure (descriptive). (2) Ethical hedonism — pleasure is morally right end (normative). (3) Epicurean — pleasure as freedom from disturbance (ataraxia), not constant indulgence. (4) Cyrenaic — immediate physical pleasure. Critiques: ignores other values (love, knowledge, achievement); pleasure machine objection (Nozick); reduces life. Connection to utilitarianism (which is hedonistic in classical form). Continues to influence ethics.
- DefinitionPleasure as highest good
- Two main typesPsychological (descriptive) and ethical (normative)
- EpicurusPleasure as ataraxia (tranquility); not constant indulgence
- CyrenaicsImmediate physical pleasure
- Famous criticRobert Nozick (experience machine, 1974)
- ConnectionFoundation of classical utilitarianism
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Why hedonism matters
- Ethics. Foundation of classical utilitarianism.
- Personal philosophy. Pursuit of pleasure.
- Psychology. Pleasure as motivation.
- Public policy. Welfare measurement.
- Religion debate. Pleasure vs duty.
- Bioethics. Quality of life concepts.
- Critiques inform ethics. What else matters?
Common misconceptions
- Pursuit of indulgence. Many forms emphasize moderation.
- Selfish. Some forms communal (utilitarianism).
- Just physical pleasure. Higher pleasures often valued.
- One philosophy. Many varieties.
- Always shallow. Sophisticated versions exist.
- Same as utilitarianism. Foundation of utilitarianism; not identical.
Frequently asked questions
What's hedonism?
Pleasure is the highest good. The ultimate end of human action. Variations exist: physical vs intellectual pleasure, immediate vs long-term, individual vs general. Two main types. (1) Psychological hedonism: factual claim that humans seek pleasure. (2) Ethical hedonism: normative claim that we should seek pleasure. Different concepts; sometimes conflated.
What's Epicurean hedonism?
Epicurus (341-270 BCE). Often misunderstood as pursuit of indulgence. Actually: pleasure is freedom from physical pain (aponia) and mental disturbance (ataraxia). Simple pleasures preferred (water, bread). Avoid: excess, fear of death, anxiety. Friendship and intellectual contemplation valued. Pleasure as absence of pain rather than constant indulgence. Misnamed: Epicurean = lifestyle of luxury (false).
What's Cyrenaic hedonism?
Aristippus (c. 4th century BCE). More radical than Epicurus. Immediate physical pleasure as good. No anticipation or memory; present moment matters. Less successful philosophical school. Provided contrast to Epicurus's more nuanced view. Cyrenaic philosophy: pleasure of moment.
What's the experience machine?
Robert Nozick (1974). Imagine machine that gives you any experiences you want — feel any pleasure, any achievement. Plug in for life. Question: would you do it? Most people: no. Suggests: we value reality, not just experiences. We want actual achievements, real love, real knowledge — not just experiences of them. Major argument against pure hedonism.
How does it connect to utilitarianism?
Classical utilitarianism (Bentham): hedonistic — utility is pleasure minus pain. Right action: maximize total pleasure across all beings. Different from psychological hedonism (about facts) and ethical hedonism (about morality). Utilitarianism uses hedonism as account of utility. Modern utilitarians often: preference-based (what people want) instead of pleasure-based.
What about Mill's "higher pleasures"?
John Stuart Mill (1861) refined Bentham. Distinguished higher pleasures (intellectual, moral, aesthetic) from lower (physical). Higher have superior quality. Famous: "Better to be Socrates dissatisfied than a fool satisfied." Plus intensity vs quality matter. Mill: those who experienced both prefer higher. Alternative to Bentham's pure quantity-based hedonism.
What are common objections?
Multiple. (1) Experience machine: shows we value reality. (2) Reduces life: ignores love, knowledge, achievement, character. (3) Some pleasures shameful or unworthy. (4) Quantification: can't really sum pleasures. (5) Higher vs lower problematic. (6) Some non-pleasure goods: justice, knowledge. (7) Philosophical zombies: imaginable beings without pleasure but worth considering. Most contemporary ethics: rejects pure hedonism.