The Early Stoa on Two Kinds of “Pleasure”
The Early Stoa on Two Kinds of “Pleasure”
Author(s): Andrei SereginSubject(s): Ethics / Practical Philosophy, Special Branches of Philosophy, Ancient Philosphy
Published by: Новосибирский государственный университет
Keywords: ancient ethics; emotion; pain; pleasure; stoicism;
Summary/Abstract: In this paper, I want to offer a detailed justification of the thesis that the early Stoics made a significant distinction between two types of hedone(i.e. “pleasure”), namely, physical pleasure and pleasurable emotion, despite using the same term for both. To this end, I first summarize the arguments in favour of this thesis that have already been presented in scholarly literature: emotion is a mental activity, while physical pleasure is one of the possible objects of this activity; the opposite of pleasure as an emotion is lype (“distress”), whereas the opposite of physical pleasure is ponos(“pain”); emotion is a moral evil, whereas physical pleasure is an indifferent. I then offer further arguments to demonstrate that, in early Stoic thought, physical pleasure should be understood as a bodily affection rather than a mental activity. Finally, I analyze and criticize the views of those scholars who argue that the early Stoics regarded physical pleasure either as a mental activity or as a component of emotion.
Journal: ΣΧΟΛΗ. Философское антиковедение и классическая традиция
- Issue Year: XIX/2025
- Issue No: 2
- Page Range: 634-654
- Page Count: 21
- Language: English
