Difference between revisions of "Happiness Fall 2017 Class Notes"

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===Methods===
 
===Methods===
:*conceptual analysis of subjective and objective in Vitrano
+
:*conceptual analysis of subjective and objective in Vitrano; think of this as a basic dimension of theoretical space for happiness.
 
:*Haybron's mention of method, p. 10.
 
:*Haybron's mention of method, p. 10.
 +
:*we're also acquiring bigger "classes of cases" to theorize from.  (Jane and the Pidana)
  
 
===Vitrano, The Subjectivity of Happiness===
 
===Vitrano, The Subjectivity of Happiness===
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::*"satisfaction criterion" (note: an objectivist can still require that one also be satisfied with one's life)
 
::*"satisfaction criterion" (note: an objectivist can still require that one also be satisfied with one's life)
  
:*modified objectivism:  
+
:*modified objectivism (adding constraints to subjectivism):  
 
::*Warner:  satisfaction, but also of "important desires" that are thought "worthwhile".  Simpson adds that the desires must actually be worthwhile.
 
::*Warner:  satisfaction, but also of "important desires" that are thought "worthwhile".  Simpson adds that the desires must actually be worthwhile.
 
::*Annas:  stronger still.  We can assess our desires and goals objectively.
 
::*Annas:  stronger still.  We can assess our desires and goals objectively.
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:*maybe happiness is too variable to have a theory about.  his approach, p. 9-10
 
:*maybe happiness is too variable to have a theory about.  his approach, p. 9-10
 
:*advocates theorizing happiness as a psychological state, separate from life satisfaction.
 
:*advocates theorizing happiness as a psychological state, separate from life satisfaction.
 +
 +
===Questions===
 +
 +
:*Do you have to achieve your goals to be happy?
 +
:*Do you have to have goals to be happy?
 +
:*What is your analysis of Jane's situation?
 +
:*What does it mean for our theory of happiness that there is happiness among the poorest people of earth and that cultures model happiness in significantly different ways?
  
 
==SEP 7==
 
==SEP 7==

Revision as of 16:57, 5 September 2017

AUG 29

Audio from class: First section, parts a and b [1], [2]. Second section: [3]

  • Course Introduction
  • Some Problems of Happiness: notes
  • Small Group Response / Peer introductions
  • Course Mechanics and Assessment
  • Course websites: alfino.org, courses (courses.alfino.org) and wiki (wiki.gonzaga.edu/faculty/alfino)
  • Submit Roster Information
  • Grading Schemes & Assignments
  • Some values of anonymity / non-anonymity in developing philosophical skill.

AUG 31

Audio from class: [4] [5]

Note on Method

  • Today's readings come from a history of happiness and a contemporary philosophical reflection on "living well" -- one of our core methods in the course will involve this kind of interdisciplinary study.
  • In your group exercise today, you will be working with methods such as: generating cases, ordering cases by principles, "pumping intuitions".
  • Thought experiment are part of a contemporary philosophers' toolkit. Nozick's "Experience Machine" is a thought experiment.

Some notes on Teaching Methods and Advice

  • transparency and anonymity -- Saint names, pseudonyms, dropboxes, peer review, sharing student work, grade distributions
  • Note on finding audio. In each class day's notes.
  • Note on finding old class notes. At bottom of main wiki page.
  • prep cycle -- check out "focus" notes on reading list, read, come to class, follow study questions from class, make notes in light of class, repeat.
  • Note your responses to things in your notes so that you can go back and collect them for the My Philosophy of Happiness paper.
  • Mark or note your readings so that you can answer study questions for use in short answer (Q&W) exercises and essay exams.

Cahn and Vitrano, "Living Well"

  • considers how various philosophers would evaluate the contrast between the fictional cases of Pat and Lee
  • Taylor and Frankfurt: P&L are equal. "living in accord with your desires" / according to what you love
  • Living well: tied to distinctions between
  • "successful lives" vs. "wasted lives"
  • lives pursuing "intrinsically valuable" goals
  • lives that are "works of art"
  • fame and achievement vs. mission and meaning vs. satisfaction with one's own activities
  • concern about the possibility of ideology or cultural bias.
  • Wolf's list: computer games and crossword puzzles not on the list, but why not, asks Haidt?
  • why disparage making money, swimming, driving cool cars?
  • why do philosopher's think they can put philosophy at the top of the list?
  • Example of Phil Saltman: Does happiness require maximizing accomplishment? Can unhappiness be associated with resignation from challenge?
  • Cahn and Vitrano's answer: p. 21.

Small Group Work

  • What is the relationship between happiness and achievement? Between happiness and using your talents? Is it an option, a favored option, a necessity?

Some general notes on Classical Views and the problem of criteria for living well

  • Note how happiness emerges as a concern in Greek culture -- (and in other cultures -- will be looking at Buddhism later)
  • Plato's (Socrates') view as exemplified in the Symposium -- finding happiness in the search for good accounts of things; knowledge.
  • Structure of Symposium -- Love and Happiness as being drawn toward a transcendent and complete reality. (and later in Christianity)
  • Specific term of Socrates' view -- eros --> desire --> lack vs. happiness --> fulfillment --> possession (self) -- problem of Alcibiades
  • Aristotle's view -- telic, developmental, but also privileging the rational, similar problem as Plato. Not an account of happiness for the masses.
  • Raises the question of criteria for living well -- How might it be true that happiness and realizing our nature are related? unrelated?

McMahon, "Chapter 1: The Highest Good"

1. Classical Greek Models of Happiness

Key theme: Greek cultural break with accommodation to destiny. Recognition of possibility of control of circumstances determining happiness.

Implicit historical narrative: Classical Greek philosophy has a point of connection with Periclean Athens, but develops Athenian cultural values in a radically new way. This begins a distinctive kind of narrative about happiness in the West.

1. The Greek Cultural Model
  • Connection of the culture with tragedy, appreciation of fate, happiness as gift of gods.
  • Dionysian culture
  • Post-Socratic Schools -- Hellenism and Hellenistic culture (we'll be returning to some of these schools later in the course)
2. The Greek Philosophical Models in Greek Philosophical culture: Plato, Aristotle, Epicurus, and Zeno.
A. Plato - Symposium gives us picture of Plato's view.
  • Contrast the Symposium with the cult of Dionysius
  • Reasoning our way to the Good (Happiness). Symposium as purification ritual (Summary including Alcibiades twist). bad desire/good desire. We will find real happiness in the pursuit of transcendent knowledge.
  • Object of desire is transcendent. (Reminder about Platonic metaphysics.) "intellectual orgasm" (36)
  • McMahon: "radical reappraisal of the standards of the world" 37
B. Aristotle (note McMahon pp. 41ff and Aristotle reading)
  • end, function, craft, techne. Hierarchy of arts.
  • end vs. final end -- the universal good is the final end, not relative. sec. 6-7.
  • happiness as activity of the soul in accordance with virture (def., but also consequence of reasoning from nature of human life)
  • Section 13: nature of the soul. two irrational elements: veg/appetitive and one rational. Note separation/relationship.
  • As M notes, Aristotle's focus on the rational part of the soul leaves him with a similar problem as Plato -- a model of happines that few (not the Alcibiades in the world) will attain.
  • Is the Greek Classical model of happiness (as seen in the Symposium and Aristotle's thought), a revelation of truth about happiness or the beginning of a repressive line of thought in happiness studies?
  • If happiness requires a disciplined practice, how do you maintain solidarity with those who do not maintain the discipline (the Alcibiades problem)? Possible weakness of an individual enlightenment model of happiness.

SEP 5

Audio from class: [6] [7]

Methods

  • conceptual analysis of subjective and objective in Vitrano; think of this as a basic dimension of theoretical space for happiness.
  • Haybron's mention of method, p. 10.
  • we're also acquiring bigger "classes of cases" to theorize from. (Jane and the Pidana)

Vitrano, The Subjectivity of Happiness

  • "objectivist view" of happiness,
  • connects happiness and the good life, living a good life.
  • especially from Aristotle: happiness is objectively related to moral and prudential goodness, "living well" and "doing well"
  • objectivists limit happiness to those who can develop their capacities and talents.
  • subjectivist view:
  • "satisfaction criterion" (note: an objectivist can still require that one also be satisfied with one's life)
  • modified objectivism (adding constraints to subjectivism):
  • Warner: satisfaction, but also of "important desires" that are thought "worthwhile". Simpson adds that the desires must actually be worthwhile.
  • Annas: stronger still. We can assess our desires and goals objectively.
  • Kekes: We can assess whether someone's satisfaction is warranted.
  • Nozick: can't call someone happy if their emotions are unjustified and based on false evaluations
  • Counterarguments to the objectivists:
  • Case of Jane, who is happy in part because of her marriage, which she considers a success, but wrong about that because her husband is having an affair.
  • might want to say that Jane would be "better off" knowing the truth, but then happiness and being "better off" are at odds, which is a problem for an objectivist who thinks happiness is the "best" state.
  • second, to the extent that happiness is an emotion, we will have to credit the experience of the emotion as a form of fulfillment of the state.
  • Other considerations supporting a subjectivist view:
  • satisfaction criterion compatible with improvement. Someone can be happy and satisfied and yet they might still be happy if they made better moral and prudential decisions.
  • therefore, subjectivism and appraisal are not incompatible.
  • subjectivists explain behavior better.
  • people actually behaves as though happiness were one among many goals.

Haybron, Dan. Chapter 1: "A Remarkable Fact"

  • compares happy Socrates from a culture we regard as impoverished to us. and
  • compares Amish, Maasai, and Inughuit to us.
  • Paradoxical for our intuitions -- they are happy but don't have things we regard as necessary to happiness.
  • International data on happiness -- What does it mean?
  • the Piraha (Pidana) - outliers
  • maybe happiness is too variable to have a theory about. his approach, p. 9-10
  • advocates theorizing happiness as a psychological state, separate from life satisfaction.

Questions

  • Do you have to achieve your goals to be happy?
  • Do you have to have goals to be happy?
  • What is your analysis of Jane's situation?
  • What does it mean for our theory of happiness that there is happiness among the poorest people of earth and that cultures model happiness in significantly different ways?

SEP 7

Audio from class: [8] [9]

SEP 12

Audio from class: [10] [11]

SEP 14

Audio from class: [12] [13]

SEP 19

Audio from class: [14] [15]

SEP 21

Audio from class: [16] [17]

SEP 26

Audio from class: [18] [19]

SEP 28

Audio from class: [20] [21]

OCT 3

Audio from class: [22] [23]

OCT 5

Audio from class: [24] [25]

OCT 10

Audio from class: [26] [27]

OCT 12

Audio from class: [28] [29]

OCT 17

Audio from class: [30] [31]

OCT 19

Audio from class: [32] [33]

OCT 24

Audio from class: [34] [35]

OCT 26

Audio from class: [36] [37]

OCT 31

Audio from class: [38] [39]

NOV 2

Audio from class: [40] [41]

NOV 7

Audio from class: [42] [43]

NOV 9

Audio from class: [44] [45]

NOV 14

Audio from class: [46] [47]

NOV 16

Audio from class: [48] [49]

NOV 21

t day pre

NOV 28

Audio from class: [50] [51]

NOV 30

Audio from class: [52] [53]

DEC 5

Audio from class: [54] [55]

DEC 7

Audio from class: [56] [57]

DEC 12/14

last week of semester