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Category Archives: Hedonism

From queer Westerns to Wes Anderson Here are HUNGER’s most … – Hunger TV

Posted: May 18, 2023 at 1:23 am

How to Have Sex

In this British title, a group of besties expect to have the time of their lives on the party town of Malia in Crete, Greece. Unfortunately for the trio of long term friends, they were born into a movie that looks to examine that world of hedonism a little more closely. Their whirlwind, out of control drinking tests their lives, friendships and even their own self-identities. Directed by Molly Manning Walker in what will be her debut feature, How to Have Sex looks to be a direct representation of those anxiety ridden days after one too many where every decision throughout your life seems like it was the wrong one.

May December

May December stars Natalie Portman and Julianne Moore in this drama about the ripple effect of a tabloid romance that once gripped the nation. Now, 20 years after the romance sparked, Hollywood star Gracie Atherton-Yu (Moore) and her husband Joe (Charles Melton) are preparing for their twins to graduate high school. Meanwhile, a less-veteran Hollywood actress, Elizabeth (Portman), comes to their Southern home to better understand Gracie before playing her in a film. However, the womens identities become oddly entangled as family dynamics begin to rip apart.

Firebrand

Brazilian filmmaker Karim Ainouzs first English-language film stars Oscar winner Alicia Vikander (The Danish Girl) as Catherine Parr, the sixth and last wife of Henry VIII (Jude Law). Based on the 2013 novel The Queens Gambit by Elizabeth Fremantle, this feminist psychological thriller follows Parr, who is romantically entangled with Thomas Seymour (Sam Riley) when she catches the eye of the king, still desperately seeking a male heir. But, after she marries him, Parr helps to make Princesses Mary and Elizabeth eligible to inherit the throne.

Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny

Harrison Fords final turn as the whip-toting archaeologist Indiana Jones is among the most highly anticipated of the film festival. In the world premiere of Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny, the 80-year-old action hero will be reunited with his trusty leather jacket and fedora for a fifth and final time. His co-stars include Fleabags Phoebe Waller-Bridge, who was born four years after the first in the franchise, Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981). Dial of Destiny is also the first Indiana Jones film not to be directed by Steven Spielberg though he does have an executive producer credit.

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WGSN, Coloro Crown Moody Navy Alternative as 2025 Color of the Year – Yahoo Life

Posted: May 10, 2023 at 10:31 am

WGSN and Coloro are betting on a dark, moody navy alternative in 2025.

The trend forecasting firm and its sister color company named Future Dusk the Color of the Year for 2025 Tuesday. WGSN described the shade as a dark, moody and intriguing hue with a sense of mystery and escapism. The tone, it added, will be important for classic styles and investment pieces, adding opulence and functioning as a gender-inclusive purple.

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Sunset Coral

For several seasons now Coloro has seen brands shifting towards palettes with long-lasting appeal, Future Dusk is an inspiring color that supports this trans-seasonal approach, Caroline Guilbert, creative content lead for Coloro, said in a statement. It appears warm and deep which makes it feel moody, mysterious and timeless.

Situated between blue and purple, Future Dusk feeds into themes of transition, WGSN said, making it perfect for a period of immense change. The firm also tied the color to what it called the second space age, citing the potential of extraterrestrial commercial opportunities, such as space tourism and asteroid mining.

Synthetic creativity will be a primary driver, it noted, as creative tools like AI art generators become widely available. It can be elevated with metallic finishes to create a celestial allure or applied to 3D renders in the metaverse, it added.

Colors that bring a sense of reassurance will be key for 2025 and we will see captivating tinted darks gaining momentum, Urangoo Samba, head of color for WGSN, said in a statement. In the near future, the lines between reality and fantasy will become more blurred than everFuture Dusk is an immersive and transformative color, aligned with this direction.

Aquatic Awe

Other key 2025 colors include barely there Transcendent Pink, an elevated, balancing and commercially dependable shade already filtering into virtual environment. Aquatic Awes transformative turquoise pits the strange and wondrous aspects ofnature against a synthetic quality suggestive of digital environments. Energizing Sunset Coral riffs on conscious hedonism and escapism. Ray Flowers radiant yellow is inspired by regenerative practices that protect biodiversity.

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Transcendent Pink

Future Dusk follows Apricot Crush, WGSN and Coloros pick for Color of the Year for 2024. The energetic, vibrant color ticks a lot of the boxes, WGSN head of womenswear Sara Maggioni said, offering versatility across seasons, genders, market levels and product categories. In December, the WGSN and Coloro unveiled their Fall/Winter 2024-2025 color palette. Joining Apricot Crush were Intense Rust, Midnight Plum, Sustained Grey and Cool Matcha.

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Woo Girl Nails Life Balance For First Time Ever With Piss Up Friday … – The Betoota Advocate

Posted: at 10:31 am

EFFIE BATEMAN|Lifestyle|Contact

Though it really shouldnt have taken her so long, local woman Daisy Simmons [32] has finally figured out how to have the perfect weekend, which balances both her need for hedonism and inability to function on a hangover anymore get shitfaced on a Friday, recover on a Saturday, and run errands/ have a coffee date with a friend on a Sunday.

Not only does this allow her to feel more refreshed for work on Monday, but also gives the illusion of a longer weekend.

Friday is absolutely the best night to get pissed, Daisy explains, I cant believe I used to be a Saturday person.

Saturday just feels like a weird day to do chores, especially because Ill just procrastinate and leave it all until Sunday anyway.

But if I go out Saturday night, then Im probably too hungover to do anything productive on Sunday.

You get me?

Daisy goes on further to explain how exciting it feels to wake up on a Saturday after a night out, knowing that she still has a lot of her weekend left.

Theres nothing worse than being hung or having a comedown on Sunday, knowing you have work the next day.

More to come.

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Biden’s Corruption Is What The Media Hoped For Trump – The Federalist

Posted: at 10:31 am

Every day, investigators uncover potential evidence that President Joe Biden sold out the country for personal gain, yet even when on full display, the corporate media refuse to call out the Democrats corruption, deliberately choosing to ignore the scandal.

Sir, there is something personal thats affecting you. Your son, while theres no ties to you, could be charged by your Department of Justice. How will that impact your presidency? MSNBCs Stephanie Ruhle twice asked the president on Friday during one of his rare sitdown interviews.

First of all, my son has done nothing wrong. I trust him. I have faith in him. It impacts my presidency by making me feel proud of him, Biden replied.

Bidens nonchalant dismissal of Hunters long history of hedonism and criminality is problematic for several reasons. But far more shocking than his redundant affirmation of his not-so-prodigal son was the question that led the president to that answer.

Just this week, Republicans Sen. Chuck Grassley and Rep. James Comer subpoenaed the FBI over a document they say alleges a criminal scheme between now-President Joe Biden and a foreign national during his years in the Obama White House.

The allegation that Biden appears to be implicated in an international bribery scheme is merely the latest piece of evidence uncovered by GOP legislators investigating whether Biden sold out the American people to the nations foreign enemies to line his own pockets. So far, Republicans have warned itdoesnt look good for POTUS.

The latest news was so big even corporate media outlets that chose not to cover the Hunter laptop scandal until well beyond the 2020 election highlighted it.

Yet, instead of covering bombshell stories like that Biden-appointed U.S. attorneys in California and D.C.recently blockedtheir offices from filing criminal tax charges against Hunter, Ruhle willfully turned a blind eye to them. Ruhle is so unbothered by the ongoing Biden corruption scandal she even tried to discredit it with no ties to you caveats about the presidents connection to Hunters potential wrongdoings.

That strategy is scandalous yet unsurprising given the corporate medias track record of covering for their preferred candidates.

The reasons for former President Donald Trumps 2016 victory are many, but calling out the fake news press for their shenanigans like Ruhles is one of the most memorable. Trumps penchant for taunting the media is likely why corporate chatterboxes and the Democrats continue to keep their spiteful sights on him.

During Trumps time in office, the corporate media criticized his tweets, twisted his words, and intentionally undermined his authority with a constant stream of lies. For their unscrupulous scheming, the press were awarded Pulitzers.

Even before Trumps presidential win, Hillary Clintons campaign hired a team to sell a narrative that Trump colluded with Russia. This tall tale was subsequently fed to the Obama administration, which used it to justify spying on Trump and his aides, despite the obviously false pretenses.

While the Russia collusion hoax and discredited Steele dossier still dominated corporate media coverage about Trump and his son Donald Trump Jr., Democrats orchestrated two sham impeachments against the president, whom they claimed was guilty of treason. Despite an incredulous lack of evidence, these political attacks were sustained with plenty of negatively framed press coverage about Trumps sons, daughters, andson-in-law.

Fast forward four years. Our current presidents children and family members are at the center of a well-evidenced probe suggesting that Biden and his family jeopardized U.S. national security to engage in potentially criminal enterprises. This is in addition to the news that Hunter exploited his fathers political reputation to strike business deals with oligarchs in Ukraine and China and then likelygave a cutto his dad.

Biden is a known serial liar and but it was Trump whose every word was fact-checked. Biden harbored classified documents from his time as vice presidentin a box by his1967 Corvette Stingray, but it was Trump who was on the receiving end of the media and the FBIs public scorn.

Even before the Democrat took office in January of 2021, the media repeated dishonest narratives created by the Biden campaign to downplay damning evidence from Hunters laptop. When Bidenrepeatedly lied on the campaign trail about Hunters overseas business dealingsto cover hisfamilys tracks and bank accounts, the press did not press him.

Instead, corporate media persistently allied themselves with the Biden White House and against the American people. When they arent going after the former first family, the corporate mediaare amplifyingthe current presidents excuses, shilling for his son, and claimingover andoverandover andoverandover that the Republicans investigation is politically motivated even though it is not.

Trump isnt the only victim of the media and the Democrat media complexs double standard.

Under Biden, liberty and justice are for all unless youre a pro-life Christian, concerned parent, MAGA Republican, or victim of Democrats deadly covid policies.

For years, members of the corporate media scrounged for dirt on their political enemies, like Trump and his voters. Yet when an actual scandal sits down for a one-on-one interview with them, they gloss over it. Do not mistake the presss lack of attention to the flailing presidents loving father facade as blissful ignorance to the extent of Bidens corruption.

Ruhles dishonest line of questioning proves that the corporate medias motivations when it comes to bombshells about the Bidens remain pure deception.

Jordan Boyd is a staff writer at The Federalist and co-producer of The Federalist Radio Hour. Her work has also been featured in The Daily Wire, Fox News, and RealClearPolitics. Jordan graduated from Baylor University where she majored in political science and minored in journalism. Follow her on Twitter @jordanboydtx.

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Brandon Cronenberg Dives into the Deep End – FilmInk

Posted: at 10:31 am

Brandon Cronenberg has established himself as one of the most unique and daring filmmakers working today. The son of David Cronenberg (Scanners, The Fly, History of Violence, Crimes of the Future), Brandon quickly made his mark with the 2012 body horror Antiviral and the 2020 award-winning psychological horror Possessor, films that saw Cronenberg Jnr. push the boundaries of violence and sex while establishing his own unique visual style.

Infinity Pool, his latest sci-fi horror, sees the filmmaker plunge into the choppy waters of social satire. Alexander Skarsgrd stars as James Foster, a struggling writer who seeks inspiration while on vacation at an exclusive seaside resort with his wealthy wife Em (Australian actress Cleopatra Coleman). A day into his holiday, James meets Gabi (Mia Goth), a mysterious and seductive actress who guides him into a nightmare-fuelled playground of consequence-free violence and hedonism.

A surreal and disturbing yet utterly captivating descent into a world where narcissism and madness drown the soul, Infinity Pool also features the subject of cloning, with the films rich antagonists creating duplicates of themselves who bear the brutal brunt of punishment for the grizzly crimes of their originals. While Infinity Pool can be described as science fiction, it should be seen as more of a distorted and disfigured fairy tale.

(Infinity Pool) is technically a sci-fi movie in the sense that there is a science fiction element to it, but its not predicted science fiction, says Brandon Cronenberg. Its not like a story that in any way accurately builds a world where cloning exists. It is a bit more like magic realism in the sense that there is something kind of resembling our own world that has this one absurd element to it; this one kind of twist to it that makes it a bit more of a fever dream version of reality and the cloning in the film is really there to talk about other things, to drive the plot and action and make a lens to look at the real world and create the satire in the film.

Cronenberg has long encouraged those who watch his films to define the themes for themselves, and Infinity Pool is no exception, with its surreal nature and social commentary on class and violence encouraging much thought and discussion, if the confronting imagery doesnt prove to be too overwhelming (Infinity Pool has an R rating for a reason). As for Cronenberg himself, Infinity Pool presents how even the most banal of souls can descend into the most decadent and depraved behaviour.

(Infinity Pool) is more generally about what happens to people when they can operate without general consequences, he says. In the film, these are very bland people who are capable of doing very horrible things when they are allowed to, and I think history is full of very normal people doing incredibly horrible things when they find themselves in the context of when that is possible.

Filmed in the seaside city of ibenik in Croatia, and in Budapest, the capital city of Hungary, in an interesting twist, both Croatia and Hungary were once under tyrannical communist rule throughout the mid to late 20th century, a historical footnote that was not lost on the filmmaker while shooting Infinity Pool.

The reason we chose those countries wasnt because of their histories, he says. But once we were there, I think that kind of old communist aspect to the fictional world, that quality was really enhanced. The real-world histories of those places really started to creep into the film and really define it. The (Kelenfld) power station in Hungary is very much a location that was built under communism. Even the police cars were used by communist politicians in Hungary. The resort we shot at was incredibly strange, but the bones [of it] were from the communist era. It has this sort of brutalist structure that was originally created under communism and was wildly renovated by this eccentric Croatian businessman who wanted to turn each aspect of the resort into another part of Croatia its even weirder as a resort in reality. Those histories really do shape the film and really did play a big part in what it became.

Cronenbergs unique approach to visuals and colour in his films have long been a subject of discussion and admiration, and Infinity Pool is no exception. Where does the filmmaker get his inspiration and ideas for his visual approach?

Part of it is a hard-to-articulate sense of aesthetics that we all sort of have, and as you work in a visual medium there are certain things that just ring true to you, he clarifies. Some of it is more calculated and intends to be pretty collaborative. For instance, when I have a finished script, before we have a cast or locations or sets or anything, my cinematographer Karim Hussain and I will spend a great deal of time making a kind of theoretical shot list where we really discuss scene by scene what the visual language of the film is and its usually motivated by narrative and other elementswe go through a very long process of exploring visual effects, playing with gels and lighting and filters and glass and projection feedback, and we stumble on interesting stuff that starts to define the film. So, some of it is innate, some of it is very calculated, and some of it is found art.

Infinity Pool will release in Australian cinemas on May 11, 2023

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The 10 Best Movies of 1996, Ranked – Collider

Posted: at 10:31 am

1996 was a diverse year for film. While not quite as memorable as 1994 or 1999, it still featured an impressive mix of box office titans and indie gems. Commercially, Independence Day, Mission: Impossible, and Twister raked in big returns. For viewers with more niche tastes, directors like Alexander Payne, Paul Thomas Anderson, and Wes Anderson burst onto the scene with electric debuts.

The finest films of the year range from musicals to slashers, gritty dramas to black comedy. Many of them have aged remarkably well, and remain engaging and vivid almost three decades later.

Waiting for Guffman is a mockumentary following the residents of the fictional town of Blaine, Missouri as they prepare for their 150th-anniversary celebration. The town's amateur theater group, led by the enthusiastic but clueless Corky St. Clair (Christopher Guest), who also directs), is determined to put on a show that will put Blaine on the map.

RELATED: 10 Razzie-Nominated Movies That Scored Above 50% On Rotten Tomatoes

The ensemble cast features several frequent Guest collaborators including Eugene Levy, Catherine O'Hara, Fred Willard, and Parker Posey, who are all on top form. It makes for a hilarious satire of small-town life and the eccentric characters who inhabit it.

Based on the Michael Ondaatje novel, The English Patient tells the story of a critically burned man (Ralph Fiennes), and his memories of his past. As his nurse Hana (Juliette Binoche) takes care of him in an abandoned Italian villa, the patient begins to reveal his history to her.

RELATED: The 10 Best A24 Films of All Time, Ranked According to Rotten Tomatoes

The film also features notable performances by Kristin Scott Thomas as the patient's lover Katharine Clifton and Willem Dafoe as a thief named Caravaggio. It won nine Academy Awards, including Best Picture, Best Director for Anthony Minghella, and Best Supporting Actress for Binoche. It's a sweeping, beautifully filmed epic and possibly Fiennes's best performance.

Billy Bob Thornton wrote, directed, and starred in this drama about Karl Childers, a man with intellectual disabilities who was committed to a mental institution for murdering his mother and her lover when he was a child. After spending most of his life in the institution, Karl is released into the world. He befriends a young boy named Frank (Lucas Black) and his mother Linda (Natalie Canerday) and begins to build a new life for himself.

RELATED: The 10 Highest Grossing Animated Movies of All Time

As Karl becomes more involved in their lives, he must confront his past and the demons that still haunt him. It works because of Thornton's committed, authentic performance. A sleeper hit, Sling Blade catapulted Thornton to the forefront of Hollywood.

Paul Thomas Anderson's debut follows John (John C. Reilly), a down-on-his-luck gambler who meets a mysterious older man named Sydney (Philip Baker Hall) in a Reno diner. Sydney takes John under his wing and teaches him how to gamble and make a living off of it. Along the way, they encounter Clementine (Gwyneth Paltrow), a cocktail waitress with a troubled past, and Jimmy (Samuel L. Jackson), an acquaintance of Sydney's with a violent streak.

As the plot unfolds, the characters become entangled in a web of deceit and double-crossing. While it only hints at the powers Anderson would unleash on later projects, Hard Eight is still a stylish and gripping exploration of the seedy world of gambling with a cast of three-dimensional characters.

"You had me at hello." Tom Cruise stars in this romantic comedy-drama as a successful sports agent who has a crisis of conscience and writes a mission statement advocating for fewer clients and a more personal approach to the business. After being fired from his job, Jerry sets out to start his own agency and enlists the help of Dorothy Boyd (Rene Zellweger), a single mother who shares his ideals.

Along the way, Jerry and Dorothy fall in love but face numerous obstacles as they try to balance their personal and professional lives. Cruise and Zellweger have great chemistry, but the real star is Cuba Gooding Jr., who won an Oscar for his performance

After helping to create the slasher film back in the 70s, Wes Craven revolutionized the genre yet again with this self-aware horror starring Neve Campbell as Sidney Prescott, a high school student who becomes the target of a mysterious killer known as Ghostface. Along with her friends, including Tatum (Rose McGowan) and Randy (Jamie Kennedy), Sidney tries to unravel the identity of the killer and stop them before it's too late.

Scream is unusually funny for a horror of its time, and delights in subverting genre tropes. It spawned a mega-franchise that continues to dominate the box office today and more than deserves its place in the horror pantheon.

Controversial filmmaker Lars von Trier directed this drama featuring Emily Watson as Bess McNeill, a young woman who falls in love with Jan (Stellan Skarsgrd), an oil rig worker. After Jan is injured on the job and left paralyzed, Bess becomes convinced that God is calling her to perform sexual acts with other men in order to heal Jan. As she becomes more and more desperate to save her husband, Bess begins to lose touch with reality and faces increasing opposition from her religious community.

Breaking the Waves is a challenging film, but it works thanks to Watson's raw and fearless performance. Cinematographer Robby Mller also deserves praise. Edgar Wrightdescribed him as a "wizard" and "a true poet of the screen."

Secrets and Lies is a powerful drama from the master of realism Mike Leigh. Cynthia (Brenda Blethyn) is a working-class woman in her 40s who discovers that she was adopted and sets out to find her birth mother. Along the way, she meets her estranged brother Maurice (Timothy Spall) and his wife Monica (Phyllis Logan), and the three of them must confront painful family secrets.

As with most of his movies, Leigh's direction is understated and naturalistic, and he expertly captures the everyday rhythms of life and the complexities of family dynamics. The result is an empathetic portrait of ordinary people struggling to come to terms with their past and find a way forward.

While not his first film, this black comedy-drama is the project that put Danny Boyle on the map. Ewan McGregor is Mark Renton, a young heroin addict living in Edinburgh who is trying to kick his addiction and start a new life. He and his friends, including Sick Boy (Jonny Lee Miller) and Spud (Ewen Bremner) take part in various harebrained criminal schemes as they struggle to find meaning and purpose in their lives.

Trainspotting is a visceral movie that captures the anarchic spirit of the 1990s counterculture. McGregor's performance as Renton is compelling, and Boyle's direction is innovative and stylish. He infuses the film with a frenetic energy that perfectly captures the hedonism and nihilism of the characters.

Among the Coen brothers' most beloved projects, this black comedy stars Frances McDormand as Marge Gunderson, a pregnant police chief in a small Minnesota town who investigates a series of murders connected to a botched kidnapping scheme. She's joined by William H. Macy as Jerry Lundegaard, a car salesman who orchestrates the kidnapping, and Steve Buscemi as Carl Showalter, one of the criminals involved in the scheme.

Suspenseful and darkly funny, Fargo influenced many crime films that would follow, not to mention its own TV spinoff. The highlight is McDormand, whose quirkiness, sharp wit, and accent rightly won her the Academy Award. She has innumerable iconic lines, like "Sir, you have no call to get snippy with me. I'm just doing my job here."

NEXT: 10 Modern Coming-of-Age Movies Destined To Become Classics

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WFA: The Shits – Everything Is Noise

Posted: at 10:31 am

While bands like Tame Impala and whatever name Thee Oh Sees are going by in 2023 remain popular in the persevering psychedelic rock scene, there are a plethora of underground bands and labels working away underneath to try to keep the genre alive. One of these labels is Rocket Recordings, with a roster full of bands such as Pigs, Pigs, Pigs, Pigs, Pigs, Pigs, Pigs and Bonnacons of Doom, trying to do just that. One of these bands is not The Shits, the newest addition to Rocket, who proclaim that psych-rock is dead and they are the executioners.

Hailing from the industrial city of Leeds in West Yorkshire, The Shits are rallying against a psychedelic transcendence by creating sounds youd likely hear if you were locked in a dungeon. Continuing my Leeds x Everything Is Noise collaboration for the year, I wanted to learn more about them and get an insight into what went wrong leading up to and following the release of their grimy new album Youre A Mess. Safe to say I got what I bargained for.

To get to know the band a little better and delve into their deranged minds a bit, I was joined by vocalist Callum Howe who, when discussing the beginnings of the band and their mission statement, told me:

You know, were a bunch of slack-jawed yokels from the provinces. The band was started by Jack, Henry and Harry (bass, guitar and drums respectively) in late 2017, we began by practicing in Harrys basement. There was another guitarist at first, who has since been replaced by Sam (we then added Tom on third guitar following our devastating performance at Supernormal Fest last year, hed agreed to play with us for the one gig; obviously it went very well). I joined on vocals at the second or third practice, I only really knew Jack at the time but naturally we all now occupy the greatest portion of each others hearts. The mission wasnt ever really discussed, though I suppose now you could ascribe such adjectives to the band as talented, obnoxious, brilliant or salacious we try to maintain these aspects.

From these first practice sessions, the band began to make a bit of a name for themselves around the underground with their ferocious and biting live performances. Their debut album Punishment appeared in 2020, with their repetitive and sludgy style already on full show. The sound is full of grit and it gets under your skin, while the razor sharp vocals give just a glimpse into the mind of Howe. 2023s Youre a Mess is their second LP and has upped the ante and honed their style a fair bit from this first album. To me, the mood of the album sums up some of the harsh realities of the UK at the moment with its harsh nature, yet Howe states:

Theres no specific search for harshness when were writing music, nor do we feel the need to channel any generalised notion of negativity. Its all good fun. The lyrics are simple and narratively driven, theres no escaping your environment but at least as far as Im concerned I dont care about directly reflecting it in the music. If it comes across that way then fine. Stylistically; you dont need us to tell you what informs the music, but Ill tell you for nothing that none of us give a fuck about AmRep.

In terms of style, a lot of comparisons could and have been made to classic noise and garage rock, including the AmRep label, but they have created a concoction of their own through these influences. The repetitive nature of the songs has created mesmerizing results with the viscous distortion of the guitar riffs going around and around and around during every song. While 7-minute opener and single In My Hotel Room sets the tone, most of the album has shorter songs with variations in tempo but no letup in intensity.

Youre a Mess is an album that I feel manages to get better across its runtime, culminating in the mammoth closer I Regret Nothing, Pts 1 & 2. While the splitting into parts reminds me of classic soul la James Brown, the song couldnt be much further in feel but for a similar swagger and confidence, clocking in at a smidge under 9 minutes. Its a vital album, with a spiteful attitude that sums up and helps to combat what the album description calls the litany of crushing indignities that life in the 2020s has to offer.

As well as a musical step forward, Youre a Mess also saw a step up to the famed British Indie label Rocket Recordings. The music that The Shits offer up is a nastier prospect than most things on the label, yet they saw more than enough to rush to sign them. Upon the signing, Rocket explained: Witnessing The Shits mind blowing mix of The Stooges, Brainbombs, Lubricated Goat, Drunk in Hell, live on stage, we were totally floored, and we knew this band had to be on Rocket.

The resulting marriage seems to be a fairly happy one, brought together by megalithic walls of distortion and seemingly kept together by a propensity for heavy drinking. From their side, The Shits commented: Rocket were consummate professionals when it comes to releasing the record, and we had a great time getting fucking leathered with them in Tilburg. As far as their track record; we are the best thing on that label. Unsurprisingly, given that theyve executed psych-rock, there is still a bit of a gulf between them and the label stylistically.

As far as a point of difference goes, The Shits bring a snarling attack alongside this clear hubris. It makes for a fascinating proposition, on record and on stage. In terms of their presence on stage, signing with Rocket also gave them the opportunity to play the famed Roadburn Fest in the Netherlands last month (on the Rocket 25th anniversary stage). On the experience Howe was less than glowing, as he affirmed that the catering was fantastic. Playing on a stage that big to so many slobbering losers felt like something we/they deserved.

Back in the smaller spaces that The Shits more regularly dwell, they have consistently involved themselves with exciting DIY spaces which have seemingly become an important part of the band. Ive noted before that these spaces are imperative in building a scene too, on these spaces and the scene though, Howe tells me:

Some of us are working on a space in Leeds and Sam runs a venue in Newcastle called The Lubber Fiend. Despite our international success playing at DIY venues is where we get to have the most fun. When we came back to Leeds (which you can see in the video above) to play in the middle of our European dates the crowd behaved appallingly, it was fantastic. Who cares about a scene?

The Shits attitude is clear for all to see and theyre a hugely intriguing band. Whether you want to listen to their records or experience their wailing hedonism live, youll be far from bored and drowning in their thick garage punk. Theyre a one of one band, and thats how they like it, and be damned if you dont but they wouldnt really care what you think anyway. The Shits have just one call to action for all of you now youve the end of this article, buy the record you stingy twats.

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10 Things You Must Do On Your First Hedo Trip – Vacation Parties

Posted: January 23, 2023 at 6:13 pm

10 Things You Must Do On Your First Hedo Trip

One you book yourself for a Hedonism vacation, you know full well that your experience at Hedonism will not be defined by the spectacular rooms, the beautiful beach and the food. As much as Hedonism II has done an excellent job updating the resort amenities in recent years, the resort still wont win any awards for its accommodations. A Hedo vacation is about experiences. What happens at Hedonism II, not only Stays At Hedo but cannot be found anywhere else. To make the most out of your Hedo Vacation, you must let go of all inhibitions once there and give yourself the permission to indulge and actually experience what being on a Hedonism Vacation is all about. If you are planning your first trip to Hedo, here are the top 10 things you must do once there.

1. The Naked Hot-Tub After Midnight

About 90% of the stories you have heard about Hedonism happens on the nude side, and the setting for more than half of those stories was the nude hot-tub after midnight. In the giant Jacuzzi tub that has a record of hosting 300 people at once, the real hedonist comes out in anyone that dares to enter when the light is at its darkest. It will be Un-Hedo-Like to go into any details of some of the things that you might witness at the Hedo Hot Tub, so the only way for you to find out is to make sure that you experience it for yourself at least once when you are on your Hedo Vacation.

2. Dance On The Piano Naked

There is probably a piano bar sing-a-long or Karaoke night that happens once or twice per week in your local town. However, I am pretty certain what happens at that local Karaoke bar is nothing compared to what goes down inside the Hedo Piano Bar on a nightly basis. There is a Hedonism version for all your favourite oldies such as Sweet Caroline, suck my ., you get the point. But atop all the Piano Bar experiences, is dancing naked on top of the Piano, doing the YMCA with your legs. Yes, it may sound a little graphic but thats what Hedonism is all about. No filters, no boundaries.

3. Dress Up For Toga Night

Dressing up in a Toga does not sound as daring as the top two items on this list. However, Toga night is a signature Hedonism experience, and a definite must do on your first Hedo trip. Many of the resort's guests buy their Togas and take it with them to wear for Toga night. However, the most authentic way to experience Toga night at Hedo is to get a white old bed sheet, rip into something hedonistic, and make it your outfit for the night. Toga Nights are not the same now as they use to be back in the day at Hedonism II, but the experience is still very much worth it

4. Nude Pool Happy Hour

After everyone has recovered from their hung-over and done with their naked sunbathing, the daily Hedo Party starts at the Nude Pool in the mid-afternoon. The nude pool features a swim-up bar and its the where most people gather in the evenings to meet new people, participate in whatever debauchery is taking place at the time. Being in the nude pool during happy hour does not mean you have to participate necessarily if you are too shy to get involved, you will still get an incredible experience out of people watching.

5. Play Volley Ball Naked

Naked VolleyBall does not sound sexy, and its not. Particularly for the guys. But it is funny as hell, and where else in the world will you ever get to play beach volleyball with a bunch of naked drunk people. Not every incredible Hedo experience is about sex. Some of the best times you will have at Hedonism is participating in some of the regular activities like playing beach volleyball. The only difference is, there are no rules, and you get to do it naked.

6. Go On Stage

If you consider yourself t be shy, use your Hedonism vacation to get over those fears. The best way to do that is by going on stage during one of the nightly shows and making a complete ass of yourself for everyone to see and enjoy. Why? Because that is what people do at Hedonism. Everything that the regular world considers strange and bizarre becomes very normal. During the nightly shows, the Hedonism entertainment staff typically ask for volunteers to come on the stage to participate in some sort of ridiculous contest. Volunteer, play along and have fun with it. Not only is it a great way to make a lot of friends, but you will conquer any stage fright you may have, you will have a lot of fun, and you can win a free bottle of rum while at it. If you want to take it even further, you can sign yourself up for the staff and guests talent show.

7. The Clothing Optional Booze Cruise

On Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays there is a Catamaran cruise that goes out twice per day from Hedonism II. The morning cruise will take you out to the caves where you get to enjoy snorkelling and swimming in the caves. The afternoon cruise takes you to Ricks Caf where you get to cliff dive and enjoy watching one of the worlds most famous sunsets. All those experiences are incredible, especially when added to what happens on a boat filled with naked, drunk Hedo guests. The Catamaran cruise is an excellent opportunity to get off the resort and do something different, and its a whole lot of fun. You will have to pay about $55 per person to take the cruise, but it includes food, alcohol and a damn good time. More than worth the money.

8. The Foam Party

Unless you have been to Hedonism II or spring break, you have probably only seen a foam party on TV, but you have never been to one. Well, Hedonism II is spring break every week for adults, and there is a foam party every Thursday night. You had probably seen a foam pit on TV before and thought that looks like so much fun. You will have your opportunity to have just as much or even more fun by jumping into the Foam Pit at Hedonism II if you are there on a Thursday night. It is the same night as the Toga party, so my only advice to you is, do not go into the foam pit in your Toga. It feels nasty. Go in naked or in your underwear.

9. Get Drunk One Night

Hedonism II is where grown people go to be immature and irresponsible. And there is nothing more irresponsible than getting totally wasted at least one night. I would only recommend doing this if you are with your spouse or a group of friends you trust. You do not want to end up in the nude hot tub at midnight with some strange dude you are embarrassed to look at the next day. Try all the cocktails at the bar, dont get alcohol poisoning, but get drunk enough not to care but still remember

10. Make A Lot Of Friends

Hedonism II is the only place in the world where you can truly say everyone is there for the same reason. To be in an open-minded environment, where they are free to be or do whatever they want without judgement. These are the people you want to be your friends. Individuals who think just like you, wont judge and will allow you to be true to yourself. The more friends you make while on vacation at Hedonism II, the more memorable your vacation experience will be.

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10 Things You Must Do On Your First Hedo Trip - Vacation Parties

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Epicurus | Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy

Posted: at 6:13 pm

Epicurus is one of the major philosophers in the Hellenistic period, the three centuries following the death of Alexander the Great in 323 B.C.E. (and of Aristotle in 322 B.C.E.). Epicurus developed an unsparingly materialistic metaphysics, empiricist epistemology, and hedonistic ethics. Epicurus taught that the basic constituents of the world are atoms, uncuttable bits of matter, flying through empty space, and he tried to explain all natural phenomena in atomic terms. Epicurus rejected the existence of Platonic forms and an immaterial soul, and he said that the gods have no influence on our lives. Epicurus also thought skepticism was untenable, and that we could gain knowledge of the world relying upon the senses. He taught that the point of all ones actions was to attain pleasure (conceived of as tranquility) for oneself, and that this could be done by limiting ones desires and by banishing the fear of the gods and of death. Epicurus gospel of freedom from fear proved to be quite popular, and communities of Epicureans flourished for centuries after his death.

Epicurus was born around 341 B.C.E., seven years after Platos death, and grew up in the Athenian colony of Samos, an island in the Mediterranean Sea. He was about 19 when Aristotle died, and he studied philosophy under followers of Democritus and Plato. Epicurus founded his first philosophical schools in Mytilene and Lampsacus, before moving to Athens around 306 B.C.E. There Epicurus founded the Garden, a combination of philosophical community and school. The residents of the Garden put Epicurus teachings into practice. Epicurus died from kidney stones around 271 or 270 B.C.E.

After Epicurus death, Epicureanism continued to flourish as a philosophical movement. Communities of Epicureans sprang up throughout the Hellenistic world; along with Stoicism, it was one of the major philosophical schools competing for peoples allegiances. Epicureanism went into decline with the rise of Christianity. Certain aspects of Epicurus thought were revived during the Renaissance and early modern periods, when reaction against scholastic neo-Aristotelianism led thinkers to turn to mechanistic explanations of natural phenomena.

Epicurus was a voluminous writer, but almost none of his own work survives. A likely reason for this is that Christian authorities found his ideas ungodly. Diogenes Laertius, who probably lived in the third century CE , wrote a 10-book Lives of the Philosophers, which includes three of Epicurus letters in its recounting of the life and teachings of Epicurus. These three letters are brief summaries of major areas of Epicurus philosophy: the Letter to Herodotus, which summarizes his metaphysics, the Letter to Pythocles, which gives atomic explanations for meteorological phenomena, and the Letter to Menoeceus, which summarizes his ethics. It also includes the Principal Doctrines, 40 sayings which deal mainly with ethical matters.

Because of the absence of Epicurus own writings, we have to rely on later writers to reconstruct Epicurus thought. Two of our most important sources are the Roman poet Lucretius (c. 94-55 B.C.E.) and the Roman politician Cicero (106-43 B.C.E.). Lucretius was an Epicurean who wrote De Rerum Natura (On the Nature of Things), a six-book poem expounding Epicurus metaphysics. Cicero was an adherent of the skeptical academy, who wrote a series of works setting forth the major philosophical systems of his day, including Epicureanism. Another major source is the essayist Plutarch (c. 50-120 CE), a Platonist. However, both Cicero and Plutarch were very hostile toward Epicureanism, so they must be used with care, since they often are less than charitable toward Epicurus, and may skew his views to serve their own purposes.

Although the major outlines of Epicurus thought are clear enough, the lack of sources means many of the details of his philosophy are still open to dispute.

Epicurus believes that the basic constituents of the world are atoms (which are uncuttable, microscopic bits of matter) moving in the void (which is simply empty space). Ordinary objects are conglomerations of atoms. Furthermore, the properties of macroscopic bodies and all of the events we see occurring can be explained in terms of the collisions, reboundings, and entanglements of atoms.

Epicurus metaphysics starts from two simple points: (1) we see that there are bodies in motion, and (2) nothing comes into existence from what does not exist. Epicurus takes the first point to be simply a datum of experience. The second point is a commonplace of ancient Greek philosophy, derived from the Principle of Sufficient Reason (the principle that for everything which occurs there is a reason or explanation for why it occurs, and why this way rather than that).

First, because bodies move, there must be empty space for them to move in, and Epicurus calls this empty space void. Second, the ordinary bodies that we see are compound bodiesthat is, bodies which are made up of further bodies, which is shown by the fact that they can be broken down into smaller pieces. However, Epicurus thinks that this process of division cannot go on indefinitely, because otherwise bodies would dissolve away into nothing. Also, there must be basic and unchangeable building blocks of matter in order to explain the regularities in nature. These non-compound bodies are atomsliterally, uncuttables. Only bodies and void exist per se, that is, exist without depending for their existence on something else. Other thingssuch as colors, time, and justiceare ultimately explicable as attributes of bodies.

Because Epicurus believes that nothing comes into existence from nothing, he thinks that the universe has no beginning, but has always existed, and will always exist. Atoms, too, as the basic building blocks of all else, cannot come into existence, but have always existed. Our particular cosmos, however, is only a temporary agglomeration of atoms, and it is only one of an infinite number of such cosmoi, which come into existence and then dissolve away. Against Aristotle, Epicurus argues that the universe is unlimited in size. If the universe were limited in size, says Epicurus, you could go to the end of it, stick your fist out, and where your fist was located would be the new limit of the universe. Of course, this process could be reiterated an endless number of times. Since the universe is unlimited in size, there must also be an unlimited number of atoms and an infinite amount of void. If the number of atoms were limited, then the density of atoms in any region would effectively be zero, and there would be no macroscopic bodies, as there evidently are. And there must be an unlimited amount of void, since without a limitless amount of void, the infinite number of atoms would be unable to move.

Up to this point, Epicurus is largely following the thought of Democritus, a pre-Socratic philosopher and one of the inventors of atomism. However, he modifies Democritus atomism in at least three important ways.

The first is that Epicurus thinks that atoms have weight. Like Democritus, Epicurus believes that atoms have the properties of size, shape, and resistance. Democritus explains all atomic motion as the result of previous atomic collisions, plus the inertia of atoms. Aristotle, however, criticizes Democritus on this point, saying that Democritus has not explained why it is that atoms move at all, rather than simply standing still. Epicurus seems to be answering this criticism when he says that atoms do have a natural motion of directiondownwardeven though there is no bottom to the universe. This natural motion is supposed to give an explanation for why atoms move in the first place. Also, Epicurus thinks that it is evident that bodies do tend to travel down, all else being equal, and he thinks that positing weight as an atomic property accounts for this better than thinking all atomic motion is the result of past collisions and inertia.

The second modification of Democritus views is the addition of the swerve. In addition to the regular tendency of atoms to move downward, Epicurus thinks that occasionally, and at random times, the atoms swerve to the side. One reason for this swerve is that it is needed to explain why there are atomic collisions. The natural tendency of atoms is to fall straight downward, at uniform velocity. If this were the only natural atomic motion, the atoms never would have collided with one another, forming macroscopic bodies. As Lucretius puts it, they would fall downward, like drops of rain, through the deep void. The second reason for thinking that atoms swerve is that a random atomic motion is needed to preserve human freedom and break the bonds of fate, as Lucretius says. If the laws of atomic motion are deterministic, then the past positions of the atoms in the universe, plus these laws, determine everything that will occur, including human action. Cicero reports that Epicurus worries that, if it has been true from eternity that, e.g., Milo will wrestle tomorrow, then presently deliberating about whether to make it true or false would be idle.

The third difference between Epicurus and Democritus has to do with their attitudes toward the reality of sensible properties. Democritus thinks that, in reality, only atoms and the void exist, and that sensible qualities such as sweetness, whiteness, and the like exist only by convention. It is controversial exactly how to understand Democritus position, but most likely he is asserting that atoms themselves have no sensible qualitiesthey are simply extended bits of stuff. The sensible qualities that we think bodies have, like sweetness, are not really in the object at all, but are simply subjective states of the percipients awareness produced by the interaction of bodies with our sense-organs. This is shown, thinks Democritus, by the fact that the same body appears differently to different percipients depending on their bodily constitution, e.g., that a white body appears yellow to somebody with jaundice, or that honey tastes bitter to an ill person. From this, Democritus derives skeptical conclusions. He is pessimistic about our ability to gain any knowledge about the world on the basis of our senses, since they systematically deceive us about the way the world is.

Epicurus wants to resist these pessimistic conclusions. He argues that properties like sweetness, whiteness, and such do not exist at the atomic levelindividual atoms are not sweet or whitebut that these properties are nonetheless real. These are properties of macroscopic bodies, but the possession of these properties by macroscopic bodies are explicable in terms of the properties of and relations amongst the individual atoms that make up bodies. Epicurus thinks that bodies have the capability to cause us to have certain types of experiences because of their atomic structure, and that such capabilities are real properties of the bodies. Similar considerations apply for properties like being healthy, being deadly, and being enslaved. They are real, but can only apply to groups of atoms (like people), not individual atoms. And these sorts of properties are also relational properties, not intrinsic ones. For example, cyanide is deadlynot deadly per se, but deadly for human beings (and perhaps for other types of organisms). Nonetheless, its deadliness for us is still a real property of the cyanide, albeit a relational one.

One important aspect of Epicurus philosophy is his desire to replace teleological (goal-based) explanations of natural phenomena with mechanistic ones. His main target is mythological explanations of meteorological occurrences and the like in terms of the will of the gods. Because Epicurus wishes to banish the fear of the gods, he insists that occurrences like earthquakes and lightning can be explained entirely in atomic terms and are not due to the will of the gods. Epicurus is also against the intrinsic teleology of philosophers like Aristotle. Teeth appear to be well-designed for the purpose of chewing. Aristotle thinks that this apparent purposiveness in nature cannot be eliminated, and that the functioning of the parts of organisms must be explained by appealing to how they contribute to the functioning of the organism as a whole. Other philosophers, such as the Stoics, took this apparent design as evidence for the intelligence and benevolence of God. Epicurus, however, following Empedocles, tries to explain away this apparent purposiveness in nature in a proto-Darwinian way, as the result of a process of natural selection.

Because of its denial of divine providence, Epicureanism was often charged in antiquity with being a godless philosophy, although Epicurus and his followers denied the charge. The main upshot of Epicurean theology is certainly negative, however. Epicurus mechanistic explanations of natural phenomena are supposed to displace explanations that appeal to the will of the gods. In addition, Epicurus is one of the earliest philosophers we know of to have raised the Problem of Evil, arguing against the notion that the world is under the providential care of a loving deity by pointing out the manifold suffering in the world.

Despite this, Epicurus says that there are gods, but these gods are quite different from the popular conception of gods. We have a conception of the gods, says Epicurus, as supremely blessed and happy beings. Troubling oneself about the miseries of the world, or trying to administer the world, would be inconsistent with a life of tranquility, says Epicurus, so the gods have no concern for us. In fact, they are unaware of our existence, and live eternally in the intermundia, the space between the cosmoi. For Epicurus, the gods function mainly as ethical ideals, whose lives we can strive to emulate, but whose wrath we need not fear.

Ancient critics thought the Epicurean gods were a thin smoke-screen to hide Epicurus atheism, and difficulties with a literal interpretation of Epicurus sayings on the nature of the gods (for instance, it appears inconsistent with Epicurus atomic theory to hold that any compound body, even a god, could be immortal) have led some scholars to conjecture that Epicurus gods are thought-constructs, and exist only in human minds as idealizations, i.e., the gods exist, but only as projections of what the most blessed life would be.

Epicurus is one of the first philosophers to put forward an Identity Theory of Mind. In modern versions of the identity theory, the mind is identified with the brain, and mental processes are identified with neural processes. Epicurus physiology is quite different; the mind is identified as an organ that resides in the chest, since the common Greek view was that the chest, not the head, is the seat of the emotions. However, the underlying idea is quite similar. (Note: not all commentators accept that Epicurus theory is actually an Identity Theory.)

The main point that Epicurus wants to establish is that the mind is something bodily. The mind must be a body, thinks Epicurus, because of its ability to interact with the body. The mind is affected by the body, as vision, drunkenness, and disease show. Likewise, the mind affects the body, as our ability to move our limbs when we want to and the physiological effects of emotional states show. Only bodies can interact with other bodies, so the mind must be a body. Epicurus says that the mind cannot be something incorporeal, as Plato thinks, since the only thing that is not a body is void, which is simply empty space and cannot act or be acted upon.

The mind, then, is an organ in the body, and mental processes are identified with atomic processes. The mind is composed of four different types of particlesfire, air, wind, and the nameless element, which surpasses the other particles in its fineness. Although Epicurus is reticent about the details, some features of the mind are accounted for in terms of the features of these atomsfor instance, the mind is able to be moved a great deal by the impact of an image (which is something quite flimsy), because of the smallness of the particles that make up the mind. The mind proper, which is primarily responsible for sensation and thought, is located in the chest, but Epicurus thinks that there is also a spirit, spread throughout the rest of the body, which allows the mind to communicate with it. The mind and spirit play roles very similar to those of the central and peripheral nervous systems in modern theory.

One important result of Epicurus philosophy of mind is that death is annihilation. The mind is able to engage in the motions of sensation and thought only when it is housed in the body and the atoms that make it up are properly arranged. Upon death, says Epicurus, the container of the body shatters, and the atoms disperse in the air. The atoms are eternal, but the mind made up of these atoms is not, just as other compound bodies cease to exist when the atoms that make them up disperse.

Epicurus explains perception in terms of the interaction of atoms with the sense-organs. Objects continually throw off one-atom-thick layers, like the skin peeling off of an onion. These images, or eidola, fly through the air and bang into ones eyes, from which one learns about the properties of the objects that threw off these eidola. This explains vision. Other senses are analyzed in similar terms; e.g., the soothing action of smooth atoms on the tongue causes the sensation of sweetness. As noted above, Epicurus maintains that such sensible qualities are real qualities of bodies.

Epicurus says that there are three criteria of truth: sensations, preconceptions, and feelings. Sensations give us information about the external world, and we can test the judgments based upon sensations against further sensations; e.g., a provisional judgment that a tower is round, based upon sensation, can be tested against later sensations to be corroborated or disproved. Epicurus says that all sensations give us information about the world, but that sensation itself is never in error, since sensation is a purely passive, mechanical reception of images and the like by sense-organs, and the senses themselves do not make judgments that the world is this way or that. Instead, error enters in when we make judgments about the world based upon the information received through the senses.

Epicurus thinks that, in order to make judgments about the world, or even to start any inquiry whatsoever, we must already be in possession of certain basic concepts, which stand in need of no further proof or definition, on pain of entering into an infinite regress. This concern is similar to the Paradox of Inquiry explored by Plato in the Meno, that one must already know about something in order to be able to inquire about it. However, instead of postulating that our immaterial souls had acquaintance with transcendent Forms in a pre-natal existence, as Plato does, Epicurus thinks that we have certain preconceptionsconcepts such as body, person, usefulness, and truthwhich are formed in our (material) minds as the result of repeated sense-experiences of similar objects. Further ideas are formed by processes of analogy or similarity or by compounding these basic concepts. Thus, all ideas are ultimately formed on the basis of sense-experience.

Feelings of pleasure and pain form the basic criteria for what is to be sought and avoided.

Epicurus is concerned to refute the skeptical tendencies of Democritus, whose metaphysics and theory of perception were similar to Epicurus. At least three separate anti-skeptical arguments are given by Epicureans:

Epicurus says that it is impossible to live as a skeptic. If a person really were to believe that he knows nothing, then he would have no reason to engage in one course of action instead of another. Thus, the consistent skeptic would engage in no action whatsoever, and would die.

If a skeptic claims that nothing can be known, then one should ask whether he knows that nothing can be known. If he says yes, then he is contradicting himself. If he doesnt say yes, then he isnt making a claim, and we dont need to listen to him.

If the skeptic says that nothing can be known, or that we cannot know the truth, we can ask him where he gets his knowledge of concepts such as knowledge and truth. If the senses cannot be relied on, as the skeptic claims, then he is not entitled to use concepts such as knowledge and truth in formulating his thesis, since such concepts derive from the senses.

Epicurus ethics is a form of egoistic hedonism; i.e., he says that the only thing that is intrinsically valuable is ones own pleasure; anything else that has value is valuable merely as a means to securing pleasure for oneself. However, Epicurus has a sophisticated and idiosyncratic view of the nature of pleasure, which leads him to recommend a virtuous, moderately ascetic life as the best means to securing pleasure. This contrasts Epicurus strongly with the Cyrenaics, a group of ancient hedonists who better fit the stereotype of hedonists as recommending a policy of eat, drink, and be merry.

Epicurus ethics starts from the Aristotelian commonplace that the highest good is what is valued for its own sake, and not for the sake of anything else, and Epicurus agrees with Aristotle that happiness is the highest good. However, he disagrees with Aristotle by identifying happiness with pleasure. Epicurus gives two reasons for this. The main reason is that pleasure is the only thing that people do, as a matter of fact, value for its own sake; that is, Epicurus ethical hedonism is based upon his psychological hedonism. Everything we do, claims Epicurus, we do for the sake ultimately of gaining pleasure for ourselves. This is supposedly confirmed by observing the behavior of infants, who, it is claimed, instinctively pursue pleasure and shun pain. This is also true of adults, thinks Epicurus, but in adults it is more difficult to see that this is true, since adults have much more complicated beliefs about what will bring them pleasure. But the Epicureans did spend a great deal of energy trying to make plausible the contention that all activity, even apparently self-sacrificing activity or activity done solely for the sake of virtue or what is noble, is in fact directed toward obtaining pleasure for oneself.

The second proof, which fits in well with Epicurus empiricism, supposedly lies in ones introspective experience. One immediately perceives that pleasure is good and that pain is bad, in the same way that one immediately perceives that fire is hot; no further argument is needed to show the goodness of pleasure or the badness of pain. (Of course, this does not establish Epicurus further contention that only pleasure is intrinsically valuable and only pain is intrinsically bad.)

Although all pleasures are good and all pains evil, Epicurus says that not all pleasures are choiceworthy or all pains to be avoided. Instead, one should calculate what is in ones long-term self-interest, and forgo what will bring pleasure in the short-term if doing so will ultimately lead to greater pleasure in the long-term.

For Epicurus, pleasure is tied closely to satisfying ones desires. He distinguishes between two different types of pleasure: moving pleasures and static pleasures. Moving pleasures occur when one is in the process of satisfying a desire, e.g., eating a hamburger when one is hungry. These pleasures involve an active titillation of the senses, and these feelings are what most people call pleasure. However, Epicurus says that after ones desires have been satisfied, (e.g., when one is full after eating), the state of satiety, of no longer being in need or want, is itself pleasurable. Epicurus calls this a static pleasure, and says that these static pleasures are the best pleasures.

Because of this, Epicurus denies that there is any intermediate state between pleasure and pain. When one has unfulfilled desires, this is painful, and when one no longer has unfulfilled desires, this steady state is the most pleasurable of all, not merely some intermediate state between pleasure and pain.

Epicurus also distinguishes between physical and mental pleasures and pains. Physical pleasures and pains concern only the present, whereas mental pleasures and pains also encompass the past (fond memories of past pleasure or regret over past pain or mistakes) and the future (confidence or fear about what will occur). The greatest destroyer of happiness, thinks Epicurus, is anxiety about the future, especially fear of the gods and fear of death. If one can banish fear about the future, and face the future with confidence that ones desires will be satisfied, then one will attain tranquility (ataraxia), the most exalted state. In fact, given Epicurus conception of pleasure, it might be less misleading to call him a tranquillist instead of a hedonist.

Because of the close connection of pleasure with desire-satisfaction, Epicurus devotes a considerable part of his ethics to analyzing different kinds of desires. If pleasure results from getting what you want (desire-satisfaction) and pain from not getting what you want (desire-frustration), then there are two strategies you can pursue with respect to any given desire: you can either strive to fulfill the desire, or you can try to eliminate the desire. For the most part Epicurus advocates the second strategy, that of paring your desires down to a minimum core, which are then easily satisfied.

Epicurus distinguishes between three types of desires: natural and necessary desires, natural but non-necessary desires, and vain and empty desires. Examples of natural and necessary desires include the desires for food, shelter, and the like. Epicurus thinks that these desires are easy to satisfy, difficult to eliminate (they are hard-wired into human beings naturally), and bring great pleasure when satisfied. Furthermore, they are necessary for life, and they are naturally limited: that is, if one is hungry, it only takes a limited amount of food to fill the stomach, after which the desire is satisfied. Epicurus says that one should try to fulfill these desires.

Vain desires include desires for power, wealth, fame, and the like. They are difficult to satisfy, in part because they have no natural limit. If one desires wealth or power, no matter how much one gets, it is always possible to get more, and the more one gets, the more one wants. These desires are not natural to human beings, but inculcated by society and by false beliefs about what we need; e.g., believing that having power will bring us security from others. Epicurus thinks that these desires should be eliminated.

An example of a natural but non-necessary desire is the desire for luxury food. Although food is needed for survival, one does not need a particular type of food to survive. Thus, despite his hedonism, Epicurus advocates a surprisingly ascetic way of life. Although one shouldnt spurn extravagant foods if they happen to be available, becoming dependent on such goods ultimately leads to unhappiness. As Epicurus puts it, If you wish to make Pythocles wealthy, dont give him more money; rather, reduce his desires. By eliminating the pain caused by unfulfilled desires, and the anxiety that occurs because of the fear that ones desires will not be fulfilled in the future, the wise Epicurean attains tranquility, and thus happiness.

Epicurus hedonism was widely denounced in the ancient world as undermining traditional morality. Epicurus, however, insists that courage, moderation, and the other virtues are needed in order to attain happiness. However, the virtues for Epicurus are all purely instrumental goodsthat is, they are valuable solely for the sake of the happiness that they can bring oneself, not for their own sake. Epicurus says that all of the virtues are ultimately forms of prudence, of calculating what is in ones own best interest. In this, Epicurus goes against the majority of Greek ethical theorists, such as the Stoics, who identify happiness with virtue, and Aristotle, who identifies happiness with a life of virtuous activity. Epicurus thinks that natural science and philosophy itself also are instrumental goods. Natural science is needed in order to give mechanistic explanations of natural phenomena and thus dispel the fear of the gods, while philosophy helps to show us the natural limits of our desires and to dispel the fear of death.

Epicurus is one of the first philosophers to give a well-developed contractarian theory of justice. Epicurus says that justice is an agreement neither to harm nor be harmed, and that we have a preconception of justice as what is useful in mutual associations. People enter into communities in order to gain protection from the dangers of the wild, and agreements concerning the behavior of the members of the community are needed in order for these communities to function, e.g., prohibitions of murder, regulations concerning the killing and eating of animals, and so on. Justice exists only where there are such agreements.

Like the virtues, justice is valued entirely on instrumental grounds, because of its utility for each of the members of society. Epicurus says that the main reason not to be unjust is that one will be punished if one gets caught, and that even if one does not get caught, the fear of being caught will still cause pain. However, he adds that the fear of punishment is needed mainly to keep fools in line, who otherwise would kill, steal, etc. The Epicurean wise man recognizes the usefulness of the laws, and since he does not desire great wealth, luxury goods, political power, or the like, he sees that he has no reason to engage in the conduct prohibited by the laws in any case.

Although justice only exists where there is an agreement about how to behave, that does not make justice entirely conventional, if by conventional we mean that any behavior dictated by the laws of a particular society is thereby just, and that the laws of a particular society are just for that society. Since the justice contract is entered into for the purpose of securing what is useful for the members of the society, only laws that are actually useful are just. Thus, a prohibition of murder would be just, but antimiscegenation laws would not. Since what is useful can vary from place to place and time to time, what laws are just can likewise vary.

Epicurus values friendship highly and praises it in quite extravagant terms. He says that friendship dances around the world telling us that we must wake to blessedness. He also says that the wise man is sometimes willing to die for a friend. Because of this, some scholars have thought that in this area, at least, Epicurus abandons his egoistic hedonism and advocates altruism toward friends. This is not clear, however. Epicurus consistently maintains that friendship is valuable because it is one of the greatest means of attaining pleasure. Friends, he says, are able to provide one another the greatest security, whereas a life without friends is solitary and beset with perils. In order for there to be friendship, Epicurus says, there must be trust between friends, and friends have to treat each other as well as they treat themselves. The communities of Epicureans can be seen as embodying these ideals, and these are ideals that ultimately promote ataraxia.

One of the greatest fears that Epicurus tries to combat is the fear of death. Epicurus thinks that this fear is often based upon anxiety about having an unpleasant afterlife; this anxiety, he thinks, should be dispelled once one realizes that death is annihilation, because the mind is a group of atoms that disperses upon death.

If death is annihilation, says Epicurus, then it is nothing to us. Epicurus main argument for why death is not bad is contained in the Letter to Menoeceus and can be dubbed the no subject of harm argument. If death is bad, for whom is it bad? Not for the living, since theyre not dead, and not for the dead, since they dont exist. His argument can be set out as follows:

Epicurus adds that if death causes you no pain when youre dead, its foolish to allow the fear of it to cause you pain now.

A second Epicurean argument against the fear of death, the so-called symmetry argument, is recorded by the Epicurean poet Lucretius. He says that anyone who fears death should consider the time before he was born. The past infinity of pre-natal non-existence is like the future infinity of post-mortem non-existence; it is as though nature has put up a mirror to let us see what our future non-existence will be like. But we do not consider not having existed for an eternity before our births to be a terrible thing; therefore, neither should we think not existing for an eternity after our deaths to be evil.

This is not meant as comprehensive bibliography; rather, its a selection of further texts to read for those who want to learn more about Epicurus and Epicureanism. Most of the books listed below have extensive bibliographies for those looking for more specialized and scholarly publications.

There are many different editions of Lucretius masterpiece, an extended exposition of Epicurus metaphysics, philosophy of mind, and natural science. I personally like the translation by Rolfe Humphries: Lucretius: The Way Things Are. The De Rerum Natura of Titus Lucretius Carus, Indiana University Press. Humphries translates Lucretius poem as a poem, not as prose, yet the translation is still very clear and readable.

The books below are all well-written and influential. They deal in-depth with problems of interpreting particular areas of Epicurus philosophy, while still remaining, for the most part, accessible to well-educated general readers. They also have extensive bibliographies. However, do not assume that the interpretations of Epicurus in these books are always widely accepted.

Tim OKeefeEmail: see web pageGeorgia State UniversityU. S. A.

Excerpt from:

Epicurus | Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy

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An All-Nude Vacation With My Boyfriend Taught Me a Ton … – SELF

Posted: January 19, 2023 at 6:33 pm

The guests at the beach, pool, and bar areas represented every shape, size, and age. People with completely normal bodies seemed to feel more comfortable in their skin than I did, which made me loosen up a bit and not worry about that little scar on my left hip that I obsess over.

Before I knew it, I was running down the beach naked, letting a stranger draw on my bare breasts with body paint. Exhilarated, I actually mounted John on a beach chair in the daylight for a little afternoon delight as another guest snuck a stare. We seemed to be the only couple having sex in public, with the exception of a few blow jobs by the pool. One big poolside orgy it was not.

It turns out growling like a tiger can enhance your orgasm.

The main takeaway from our first Tantric couples' workshop was that some sex moves can help me experience a better orgasmand help my partner last longerwithout changing positions or involving fancy toys. This we learned from Kim and Brad Walker of Houston-based Tantric Hearts, who have been teaching at Hedonism II for 17 years.

Much like with yoga, a huge part of Tantra is connecting your breath with your movement. When we were having sex after the class, I instructed John to do the "breath of fire" we learned in class, aka breathe quickly through his nose from his navel. Doing so immediately slowed his orgasmic roll, allowing him to flip me over on top of him.

As we were about to orgasm, I literally looked at my notes from class to remember the next breathing technique. "Growl. Tiger. Loud. Mouth," my notes said. Bad note-taking aside, it was the push we needed to make an intense growling tiger sound out of our mouths as we started to orgasm. The point is to tap into the primal, animalistic nature of sex.

It felt silly, but the sound of the growl vibrated through my torso, giving me this delicious, humming buzz, as if the orgasmic energy were spreading through my body via the vibrations. It made my orgasm feel stronger, bigger, and longer.

Earlier in class, Brad said that if we did this correctly, "the neighbors should be jealous." Maybe even "a little scared," Kim added. Mission accomplished! As we exited our room an hour later, we got a little nod and a wink from a couple passing by.

Courtesy of Carrie Borzillo

Taking the time to explore helped us discover secret erogenous zones.

The "Drive Your Partner Wild With Desire" class focused on the Tantra principle of using all five senses (i.e., sight, touch, smell, taste, and sound) to awaken your sexuality and increase your pleasure. "These are the five keys to bigger and better orgasms," Kim told the class.

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An All-Nude Vacation With My Boyfriend Taught Me a Ton ... - SELF

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