Epicureanism is a system of philosophy based upon the teachings of the ancient Greek philosopher Epicurus, founded around 307 BC. Epicurus was an atomic materialist, following in the steps of Democritus. His materialism led him to a general attack on superstition and divine intervention. Following Aristippus—about
whom very little is known—Epicurus believed that what he called
"pleasure" (ἡδονή) was the greatest good, but that the way to attain
such pleasure was to live modestly, to gain knowledge of the workings of
the world, and to limit one's desires. This would lead one to attain a
state of tranquility (ataraxia) and freedom from fear as well as an absence of bodily pain (aponia). The combination of these two states constitutes happiness in its highest form. Although Epicureanism is a form of hedonism
insofar as it declares pleasure to be its sole intrinsic goal, the
concept that the absence of pain and fear constitutes the greatest
pleasure, and its advocacy of a simple life, make it very different from
"hedonism" as colloquially understood.
Epicureanism was originally a challenge to Platonism, though later it became the main opponent of Stoicism. Epicurus and his followers shunned politics. After the death of Epicurus, his school was headed by Hermarchus; later many Epicurean societies flourished in the Late Hellenistic era and during the Roman era (such as those in Antiochia, Alexandria, Rhodes, and Ercolano). Its best-known Roman proponent was the poet Lucretius.
By the end of the Roman Empire, being opposed by philosophies (mainly
Neo-Platonism) that were now in the ascendant, Epicureanism had all but
died out, and would be resurrected in the Age of Enlightenment.
Some writings by Epicurus have survived. Some scholars consider the epic poem On the Nature of Things
by Lucretius to present in one unified work the core arguments and
theories of Epicureanism. Many of the scrolls unearthed at the Villa of the Papyri at Herculaneum are Epicurean texts. At least some are thought to have belonged to the Epicurean Philodemus.
History
In Mytilene, the capital of the island Lesbos, and then in Lampsacus, Epicurus taught and gained followers. In Athens, Epicurus bought a property for his school called "Garden", later the name of Epicurus' school. Its members included Hermarchus, Idomeneus, Colotes, Polyaenus, and Metrodorus.
Epicurus emphasized friendship as an important ingredient of happiness,
and the school seems to have been a moderately ascetic community which
rejected the political limelight of Athenian philosophy. They were
fairly cosmopolitan by Athenian standards, including women and slaves. Some members were also vegetarians as, from slender evidence, Epicurus did not eat meat, although no prohibition against eating meat was made.
The school's popularity grew and it became, along with Stoicism, Platonism, Peripateticism, and Pyrrhonism, one of the dominant schools of Hellenistic philosophy, lasting strongly through the later Roman Empire. Another major source of information is the Roman politician and philosopher Cicero, although he was highly critical, denouncing the Epicureans as unbridled hedonists, devoid of a sense of virtue and duty, and guilty of withdrawing from public life. Another ancient source is Diogenes of Oenoanda, who composed a large inscription at Oenoanda in Lycia.
Deciphered carbonized scrolls obtained from the library at the Villa of the Papyri in Herculaneum contain a large number of works by Philodemus, a late Hellenistic Epicurean, and Epicurus himself, attesting to the school's enduring popularity. Diogenes reports slanderous stories, circulated by Epicurus' opponents. With growing dominance of Neoplatonism and Peripateticism, and later, Christianity, Epicureanism declined. By the late third century CE, there was little trace of its existence. The early Christian writer Lactantius criticizes Epicurus at several points throughout his Divine Institutes. In Dante Alighieri's Divine Comedy, the Epicureans are depicted as heretics suffering in the sixth circle of hell. In fact, Epicurus appears to represent the ultimate heresy. The word for a heretic in the Talmudic literature is "Apiqoros" (אפיקורוס).
In the 17th century, the French Franciscan priest, scientist and philosopher Pierre Gassendi wrote two books forcefully reviving Epicureanism. Shortly thereafter, and clearly influenced by Gassendi, Walter Charleton published several works on Epicureanism in English. Attacks by Christians continued, most forcefully by the Cambridge Platonists.
In the early modern period, scientists adopted atomist theories, while materialist philosophers embraced Epicurus' hedonist ethics and restated his objections to natural teleology.
Religion
Epicureanism
does not deny the existence of the gods; rather it denies their
involvement in the world. According to Epicureanism, the gods do not
interfere with human lives or the rest of the universe in any way.
The manner in which the Epicurean gods exist is still disputed. Some
scholars say that Epicureanism believes that the gods exist outside the
mind as material objects (the realist position), while others assert
that the gods only exist in our minds as ideals (the idealist position).
The realist position holds that Epicureans understand the gods as
existing as physical and immortal beings made of atoms that reside
somewhere in reality.
However, the gods are completely separate from the rest of reality;
they are uninterested in it, play no role in it, and remain completely
undisturbed by it. Instead, the gods live in what is called the metakosmia, or the space between worlds.
Contrarily, the idealist position holds that Epicurus did not actually
conceive of the gods as existing in reality. Rather, Epicurus is said to
have viewed the gods as just idealized forms of the best human life, and it is thought that the gods were emblematic of the life one should aspire towards. The debate between these two positions was revived by A. A. Long and David Sedley in their 1987 book, The Hellenistic Philosophers, in which the two argued in favor of the idealist position. While a scholarly consensus has yet to be reached, the realist position remains the prevailing viewpoint at this time.
Epicureanism also offered arguments against the existence of the gods in the manner proposed by other belief systems. The Riddle of Epicurus, or Problem of evil, is a famous argument against the existence of an all-powerful and providential God or gods. As recorded by Lactantius:
God either wants to eliminate bad things and cannot, or can but does not want to, or neither wishes to nor can, or both wants to and can. If he wants to and cannot, then he is weak – and this does not apply to god. If he can but does not want to, then he is spiteful – which is equally foreign to god's nature. If he neither wants to nor can, he is both weak and spiteful, and so not a god. If he wants to and can, which is the only thing fitting for a god, where then do bad things come from? Or why does he not eliminate them?
— Lactantius, De Ira Deorum
This type of trilemma argument (God is omnipotent, God is good, but Evil exists) was one favoured by the ancient Greek skeptics,
and this argument may have been wrongly attributed to Epicurus by
Lactantius, who, from his Christian perspective, regarded Epicurus as an
atheist. According to Reinhold F. Glei,
it is settled that the argument of theodicy is from an academical
source which is not only not Epicurean, but even anti-Epicurean. The earliest extant version of this trilemma appears in the writings of the Pyrrhonist philosopher Sextus Empiricus.
Parallels may be drawn to Jainism and Buddhism, which similarly emphasize a lack of divine interference and aspects of its atomism.
Epicureanism also resembles Buddhism in its temperateness, including
the belief that great excess leads to great dissatisfaction.
Philosophy
Epicureanism argued that pleasure was the chief good in life.
Hence, Epicurus advocated living in such a way as to derive the
greatest amount of pleasure possible during one's lifetime, yet doing so
moderately in order to avoid the suffering incurred by overindulgence
in such pleasure. Emphasis was placed on pleasures of the mind rather than on physical pleasures. Unnecessary and, especially, artificially produced desires were to be suppressed.
Since the political life could give rise to desires that could disturb
virtue and one's peace of mind, such as a lust for power or a desire for
fame, participation in politics was discouraged.
Further, Epicurus sought to eliminate the fear of the gods and of
death, seeing those two fears as chief causes of strife in life.
Epicurus actively recommended against passionate love, and believed it
best to avoid marriage altogether. He viewed recreational sex as a
natural, but not necessary desire that should be generally avoided.
The Epicurean understanding of justice was inherently
self-interested. Justice was deemed good because it was seen as mutually
beneficial. Individuals would not act unjustly even if the act was initially unnoticed because of possibly being caught and punished. Both punishment and fear of punishment would cause a person disturbance and prevent them from being happy.
Epicurus laid great emphasis on developing friendships as the basis of a satisfying life.
of all the things which wisdom has contrived which contribute to a blessed life, none is more important, more fruitful, than friendship
— quoted by Cicero
While the pursuit of pleasure formed the focal point of the
philosophy, this was largely directed to the "static pleasures" of
minimizing pain, anxiety and suffering. In fact, Epicurus referred to
life as a "bitter gift".
When we say . . . that pleasure is the end and aim, we do not mean the pleasures of the prodigal or the pleasures of sensuality, as we are understood to do by some through ignorance, prejudice or wilful misrepresentation. By pleasure we mean the absence of pain in the body and of trouble in the soul. It is not by an unbroken succession of drinking bouts and of revelry, not by sexual lust, nor the enjoyment of fish and other delicacies of a luxurious table, which produce a pleasant life; it is sober reasoning, searching out the grounds of every choice and avoidance, and banishing those beliefs through which the greatest tumults take possession of the soul.
— Epicurus, "Letter to Menoeceus"
Epicureanism rejects immortality. It believes in the soul, but
suggests that the soul is mortal and material, just like the body.
Epicurus rejected any possibility of an afterlife, while still
contending that one need not fear death: "Death is nothing to us; for
that which is dissolved, is without sensation, and that which lacks
sensation is nothing to us." From this doctrine arose the Epicurean Epitaph: Non fui, fui, non sum, non curo
("I was not; I was; I am not; I do not care"), which is inscribed on
the gravestones of his followers and seen on many ancient gravestones of
the Roman Empire. This quotation is often used today at humanist funerals.
Ethics
Epicureanism
bases its ethics on a hedonistic set of values. In the most basic
sense, Epicureans see pleasure as the purpose of life.
As evidence for this, Epicureans say that nature seems to command us to
avoid pain, and they point out that all animals try to avoid pain as
much as possible.
Epicureans had a very specific understanding of what the greatest
pleasure was, and the focus of their ethics was on the avoidance of pain
rather than seeking out pleasure.
Epicureanism divided pleasure into two broad categories: pleasures of the body and pleasures of the mind.
- Pleasures of the body: These pleasures involve sensations of the body, such as the act of eating delicious food or of being in a state of comfort free from pain, and exist only the present. One can only experience pleasures of the body in the moment, meaning they only exist as a person is experiencing them.
- Pleasures of the mind: These pleasures involve mental processes and states; feelings of joy, the lack of fear, and pleasant memories are all examples of pleasures of the mind. These pleasures of the mind do not only exist in the present, but also in the past and future, since memory of a past pleasant experience or the expectation of some potentially pleasing future can both be pleasurable experiences. Because of this, the pleasures of the mind are considered to be greater than those of the body.
The Epicureans further divided each of these types of pleasures into two categories: kinetic pleasure and katastematic pleasure.
- Kinetic pleasure: Kinetic pleasure describes the physical or mental pleasures that involve action or change. Eating delicious food, as well as fulfilling desires and removing pain, which is itself considered a pleasurable act, are all examples of kinetic pleasure in the physical sense. According to Epicurus, feelings of joy would be an example of mental kinetic pleasure.
- Katastematic pleasure: Katastematic pleasure describes the pleasure one feels while in a state without pain. Like kinetic pleasures, katastematic pleasures can also be physical, such as the state of not being thirsty, or mental, such as freedom from a state of fear. Complete physical katastematic pleasure is called aponia, and complete mental katastematic pleasure is called ataraxia.
From this understanding, Epicureans concluded that the greatest
pleasure a person could reach was the complete removal of all pain, both
physical and mental. The ultimate goal then of Epicurean ethics was to reach a state of aponia and ataraxia. In order to do this an Epicurean had to control their desires, because desire itself was seen as painful. Not only will controlling one's desires bring about aponia, as one will rarely suffer from not being physically satisfied, but controlling one's desires will also help to bring about ataraxia because one will not be anxious about becoming discomforted since one would have so few desires anyway.
Epicurus distinguishes three kinds of desires: the natural and
necessary, the natural but not necessary, and those that are neither
natural or necessary.
- Natural and necessary: These desires are limited desires that are innately present in all humans; it is part of human nature to have them. They are necessary for one of three reasons: necessary for happiness, necessary for freedom from bodily discomfort, and necessary for life. Clothing would belong to the first two categories, while something like food would belong to the third.
- Natural but not necessary: These desires are innate to humans, but they do not need to be fulfilled for their happiness or their survival. Wanting to eat delicious food when one is hungry is an example of a natural but not necessary desire. The main problem with these desires is that they fail to substantially increase a person's happiness, and at the same time require effort to obtain and are desired by people due to false beliefs that they are actually necessary. It is for this reason that they should be avoided.
- Not natural nor necessary: These desires are neither innate to humans nor required for happiness or health; indeed, they are also limitless and can never be fulfilled. Desires of wealth or fame would fall under this category, and such desires are to be avoided because they will ultimately only bring about discomfort.
If one follows only natural and necessary desires, then, according to Epicurus, one would be able to reach aponia and ataraxia and thereby the highest form of happiness.
Epicurus was also an early thinker to develop the notion of justice as a
social contract. He defined justice as an agreement made by people not
to harm each other.
The point of living in a society with laws and punishments is to be
protected from harm so that one is free to pursue happiness. Because of this, laws that do not contribute to promoting human happiness are not just. He gave his own unique version of the ethic of reciprocity, which differs from other formulations by emphasizing minimizing harm and maximizing happiness for oneself and others:
It is impossible to live a pleasant life without living wisely and well and justly, and it is impossible to live wisely and well and justly without living a pleasant life.
- ("justly" meaning to prevent a "person from harming or being harmed by another")
Epicureanism incorporated a relatively full account of the social contract theory, and in part attempts to address issues with the society described in Plato's Republic. The social contract theory established by Epicureanism is based on mutual agreement, not divine decree.
Epicurean physics
Epicurean physics held that the entire universe consisted of two things: matter and void. Matter is made up of atoms, which are tiny bodies that have only the unchanging qualities of shape, size, and weight. Atoms were felt to be unchanging because the Epicureans believed that
the world was ordered and that changes had to have specific and
consistent sources, e.g. a plant species only grows from a seed of the
same species.
Epicurus holds that there must be an infinite supply of atoms, although
only a finite number of types of atoms, as well as an infinite amount of
void. Epicurus explains this position in his letter to Herodotus:
Moreover, the sum of things is unlimited both by reason of the multitude of the atoms and the extent of the void. For if the void were infinite and bodies finite, the bodies would not have stayed anywhere but would have been dispersed in their course through the infinite void, not having any supports or counterchecks to send them back on their upward rebound. Again, if the void were finite, the infinity of bodies would not have anywhere to be.
Because of the infinite supply of atoms, there are an infinite amount of worlds, or cosmoi.
Some of these worlds could be vastly different than our own, some quite
similar, and all of the worlds were separated from each other by vast
areas of void (metakosmia).
Epicureanism states that atoms are unable to be broken down into
any smaller parts, and Epicureans offered multiple arguments to support
this position.
Epicureans argue that because void is necessary for matter to move,
anything which consists of both void and matter can be broken down,
while if something contains no void then it has no way to break apart
because no part of the substance could be broken down into a smaller
subsection of the substance.
They also argued that in order for the universe to persist, what it is
ultimately made up of must not be able to be changed or else the
universe would be essentially destroyed.
Atoms are constantly moving in one of four different ways. Atoms can simply collide with each other and then bounce off of each other.
When joined with each other and forming a larger object, atoms can
vibrate as they into each other while still maintaining the overall
shape of the larger object. When not prevented by other atoms, all atoms move at the same speed naturally downwards in relation to the rest world.
This downwards motion is natural for atoms; however, as their fourth
means of motion, atoms can at times randomly swerve out of their usual
downwards path.
This swerving motion is what allowed for the creation of the universe,
since as more and more atoms swerved and collided with each other,
objects were able to take shape as the atoms joined together. Without
the swerve, the atoms would never have interacted with each other, and
simply continued to move downwards at the same speed.
Epicurus also felt that the swerve was what accounted for humanity's free will. If it were not for the swerve, humans would be subject to a never-ending chain of cause and effect. This was a point which Epicureans often used to criticize Democritus' atomic theory.
Epicureans believed that senses also relied on atoms. Every
object was continually emitting particles from itself that would then
interact with the observer. All sensations, such as sight, smell, or sound, relied on these particles.
While the atoms that were emitted did not have the qualities that the
senses were perceiving, the manner in which they were emitted caused the
observer to experience those sensations, e.g. red particles were not
themselves red but were emitted in a manner that caused the viewer to
experience the color red. The atoms are not perceived individually, but rather as a continuous sensation because of how quickly they move.
Epistemology
Epicurean philosophy employs an empirical epistemology. The Epicureans believed that all sense perceptions were true, and that errors arise in how we judge those perceptions. When we form judgments about things (hupolepsis), they can be verified and corrected through further sensory information.
For example, if someone sees a tower from far away that appears to be
round, and upon approaching the tower they see that it is actually
square, they would come to realize that their original judgement was
wrong and correct their wrong opinion.
Epicurus is said to have proposed three criteria of truth: sensations (aisthêsis), preconceptions (prolepsis), and feelings (pathê). A fourth criterion called "presentational applications of the mind" (phantastikai epibolai tês dianoias) was said to have been added by later Epicureans. These criteria formed the method through which Epicureans thought we gained knowledge.
Since Epicureans thought that sensations could not deceive, sensations are the first and main criterion of truth for Epicureans.
Even in cases where sensory input seems to mislead, the input itself is
true and the error arises from our judgments about the input. For
example, when one places a straight oar in the water, it appears bent.
The Epicurean would argue that image of the oar, that is the atoms
traveling from the oar to the observer's eyes, have been shifted and
thus really do arrive at the observer's eyes in the shape of a bent oar.
The observer makes the error in assuming that the image he or she
receives correctly represents the oar and has not been distorted in some
way.
In order to not make erroneous judgments about perceivable things and
instead verify one's judgment, Epicureans believed that one needed to
obtain "clear vision" (enargeia) of the perceivable thing by closer examination. This acted as a justification for one's judgments about the thing being perceived. Enargeia
is characterized as sensation of an object that has been unchanged by
judgments or opinions and is a clear and direct perception of that
object.
An individual's preconceptions are his or her concepts of what
things are, e.g. what someone's idea of a horse is, and these concepts
are formed in a person's mind through sensory input over time.
When the word that relates to the preconception is used, these
preconceptions are summoned up by the mind into the person's thoughts. It is through our preconceptions that we are able to make judgments about the things that we perceive. Preconceptions were also used by Epicureans to avoid the paradox proposed by Plato in the Meno regarding learning.
Plato argues that learning requires us to already have knowledge of
what we are learning, or else we would be unable to recognize when we
had successfully learned the information. Preconceptions, Epicureans argue, provide individuals with that pre-knowledge required for learning.
Our feelings or emotions (pathê) are how we perceive pleasure and pain.
They are analogous to sensations in that they are a means of
perception, but they perceive our internal state as opposed to external
things.
According to Diogenes Laertius, feelings are how we determine our
actions. If something is pleasurable, we pursue that thing, and if
something is painful, we avoid that thing.
The idea of "presentational applications of the mind" is an
explanation for how we can discuss and inquire about things we cannot
directly perceive. We receive impressions of such things directly in our minds, instead of perceiving them through other senses.
The concept of "presentational applications of the mind" may have been
introduced to explain how we learn about things that we cannot directly
perceive, such as the gods.
Tetrapharmakos
Tetrapharmakos, or "The four-part cure", is Philodemus of Gadara's basic guideline as to how to live the happiest possible life, based on the first four of Epicurus' Principal Doctrines.
This poetic doctrine was handed down by an anonymous Epicurean who
summed up Epicurus' philosophy on happiness in four simple lines:
Don't fear god,
Don't worry about death;
What is good is easy to get, and
What is terrible is easy to endure.
— Philodemus, Herculaneum Papyrus, 1005, 4.9–14
Notable Epicureans
One of the earliest Roman writers espousing Epicureanism was Amafinius. Other adherents to the teachings of Epicurus included the poet Horace, whose famous statement Carpe Diem ("Seize the Day") illustrates the philosophy, as well as Lucretius, who wrote the poem De rerum natura about the tenets of the philosophy. The poet Virgil was another prominent Epicurean (see Lucretius for further details). The Epicurean philosopher Philodemus of Gadara,
until the 18th century only known as a poet of minor importance, rose
to prominence as most of his work along with other Epicurean material
was discovered in the Villa of the Papyri. In the second century CE, comedian Lucian of Samosata and wealthy promoter of philosophy Diogenes of Oenoanda were prominent Epicureans.
Julius Caesar leaned considerably toward Epicureanism, which e.g. led to his plea against the death sentence during the trial against Catiline, during the Catiline conspiracy where he spoke out against the Stoic Cato.
In modern times Thomas Jefferson referred to himself as an Epicurean:
If I had time I would add to my little book the Greek, Latin and French texts, in columns side by side. And I wish I could subjoin a translation of Gassendi's Syntagma of the doctrines of Epicurus, which, notwithstanding the calumnies of the Stoics and caricatures of Cicero, is the most rational system remaining of the philosophy of the ancients, as frugal of vicious indulgence, and fruitful of virtue as the hyperbolical extravagances of his rival sects.
Other modern-day Epicureans were Gassendi, Walter Charleton, François Bernier, Saint-Evremond, Ninon de l'Enclos, Denis Diderot, Frances Wright and Jeremy Bentham.
Christopher Hitchens referred to himself as an Epicurean. In France, where perfumer/restaurateur Gérald Ghislain refers to himself as an Epicurean, Michel Onfray is developing a post-modern approach to Epicureanism. In his recent book titled The Swerve, Stephen Greenblatt identified himself as strongly sympathetic to Epicureanism and Lucretius. Humanistic Judaism as a denomination also claims the Epicurean label.
Modern usage and misconceptions
In modern popular usage, an Epicurean is a connoisseur of the arts of life and the refinements of sensual pleasures; Epicureanism implies a love or knowledgeable enjoyment especially of good food and drink.
Because Epicureanism posits that pleasure is the ultimate good (telos),
it has been commonly misunderstood since ancient times as a doctrine
that advocates the partaking in fleeting pleasures such as sexual excess
and decadent food. This is not the case. Epicurus regarded ataraxia (tranquility, freedom from fear) and aponia
(absence of pain) as the height of happiness. He also considered
prudence an important virtue and perceived excess and overindulgence to
be contrary to the attainment of ataraxia and aponia.
Instead, Epicurus preferred "the good", and "even wisdom and culture" to the "pleasure of the stomach".
While some twentieth-century commentary has sought to diminish this
and related quotations, the consistency with Epicurean philosophy
overall has more recently been explained.
When Epicurus sought moderation at meals, he was also not averse
to moderation in moderation, that is, to occasional luxury. His
community also became known for its feasts of the twentieth (of the
Greek month).