Counter-Currents
Counter-Currents Radio Podcast No. 92
The Pursuit of Happiness
Detachment, Part 1
Greg Johnson
47:19 / 144 words
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Beginning in August of 1999, I gave a series of eight lectures on “The Pursuit of Happiness: Philosophies East and West,” dealing with different conceptions of the good life. The syllabus was:
- Introduction
- Harmony, Inner and Outer (Plato, Lao Tzu)
- Self-Actualization (Montaigne, Nietzsche)
- Detachment (Epictetus, the Buddha)
- Duty (Confucius, Kant, Montaigne)
- Pleasure (Callicles, Epicurus)
- The Conquest of Nature (Ayn Rand)
- The Spiritual Life (William James)
I have tapes of all eight lectures, and the sound quality so far seems pretty good. I will put them online in 16 parts. As usual, the students’ questions were often not caught by the microphone, so they were edited out. But my answers make clear what the questions were.
Counter-Currents Radio Podcast No. 92 The Pursuit of Happiness Detachment, Part 1
Counter-Currents%20Radio%20Podcast%20No.%2092andnbsp%3BThe%20Pursuit%20of%20Happinessandnbsp%3BDetachment%2C%20Part%201
Counter-Currents%20Radio%20Podcast%20No.%2092andnbsp%3BThe%20Pursuit%20of%20Happinessandnbsp%3BDetachment%2C%20Part%201
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3 comments
“Of what consequence is my happiness?” thus spake Zarathustra.
I liked the stoics when I was at university. They remind me of the old saying ‘sticks and stones may break my bones, but names will never hurt me.’ I could say that with great self-righteousness. As usual, a very interesting lecture.
Epictetus and Epicurus.
Stoicism and Epicureanism.
The commonality?
Both are epic.
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