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Plato on Pleasure and the Good Life
Contributor(s): Russell, Daniel (Author)
ISBN: 0199229791     ISBN-13: 9780199229796
Publisher: Clarendon Press
OUR PRICE:   $49.40  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: November 2007
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Philosophy | History & Surveys - Ancient & Classical
- Philosophy | Ethics & Moral Philosophy
Dewey: 171.409
Physical Information: 0.7" H x 6.1" W x 9.1" (0.95 lbs) 284 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
Daniel Russell examines Plato's subtle and insightful analysis of pleasure and explores its intimate connections with his discussions of value and human psychology. Russell offers a fresh perspective on how good things bear on happiness in Plato's ethics, and shows that, for Plato, pleasure
cannot determine happiness because pleasure lacks a direction of its own. Plato presents wisdom as a skill of living that determines happiness by directing one's life as a whole, bringing about goodness in all areas of one's life, as a skill brings about order in its materials. The materials of
the skill of living are, in the first instance, not things like money or health, but one's attitudes, emotions, and desires where things like money and health are concerned. Plato recognizes that these materials of the psyche are inchoate, ethically speaking, and in need of direction from wisdom.
Among them is pleasure, which Plato treats not as a sensation but as an attitude with which one ascribes value to its object.

However, Plato also views pleasure, once shaped and directed by wisdom, as a crucial part of a virtuous character as a whole. Consequently, Plato rejects all forms of hedonism, which allows happiness to be determined by a part of the psyche that does not direct one's life but is among the materials
to be directed. At the same time, Plato is also able to hold both that virtue is sufficient for happiness, and that pleasure is necessary for happiness, not as an addition to one's virtue, but as a constituent of one's whole virtuous character itself. Plato therefore offers an illuminating role for
pleasure in ethics and psychology, one to which we may be unaccustomed: pleasure emerges not as a sensation or even a mode of activity, but as an attitude - one of the ways in which we construe our world--and as such, a central part of every character.