{"id":153056,"date":"2016-07-09T20:06:02","date_gmt":"2016-07-10T00:06:02","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.designerchildren.com\/catholic-encyclopedia-hedonism-new-advent\/"},"modified":"2016-07-09T20:06:02","modified_gmt":"2016-07-10T00:06:02","slug":"catholic-encyclopedia-hedonism-new-advent-2","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/hedonism\/catholic-encyclopedia-hedonism-new-advent-2\/","title":{"rendered":"CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Hedonism &#8211; NEW ADVENT"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>    Help support New Advent and get the full contents of this    website as an instant download. Includes the    Catholic Encyclopedia, Church Fathers, Summa, Bible and more     all for only $19.99...  <\/p>\n<p>    (hedon, pleasure).  <\/p>\n<p>    The name given to the group of ethical systems that hold, with    various modifications, that feelings of pleasure or happiness are the highest and final    aim of conduct; that, consequently those     actions which    increase the sum of pleasure are thereby constituted     right, and,    conversely, what increases pain is wrong.       <\/p>\n<p>    The father of Hedonism was     Aristippus of    Cyrene. He taught that    pleasure is the universal     and ultimate object of endeavour. By    pleasure he meant not merely sensual gratification but also the    higher forms of    enjoyment, mental pleasures,    domestic love, friendship,    and moral    contentment. His followers, however, reduced the system to a    plea for self-indulgence (see CYRENAIC SCHOOL OF PHILOSOPHY).      <\/p>\n<p>    To the Cyrenaic    succeeded the School        of Epicurus, who emphasized    the superiority of social      and intellectual pleasures over those of    the senses. He also conferred more dignity on the     hedonistic doctrine by combining it with the    atomic theory of matter     ; and this synthesis finds its finished    expression in the materialistic      determinism      of the Roman      poet Lucretius. Epicurus taught that pain and    self-restraint have a hedonistic value; for pain is    sometimes a necessary means    to health and enjoyment; while self-restraint and     prudent     asceticism are    indispensable if we would secure for ourselves the maximum of    pleasure (see EPICUREANISM).    With the decay of old Roman      ideals and the     rise  of    imperialism the Epicurean     philosophy        flourished in Rome. It    accelerated the destruction of pagan     religious    beliefs, and, at the same    time, was among the forces that resisted Christianity.       <\/p>\n<p>    The revival of hedonistic principles in our own times    may be traced to a line of English philosophers, Hobbes, Hartley,    Bentham,     James Mill,     John     Stuart Mill, the    two Austins,    and, more recently, Alexander        Bain, who are popularly known as Utilitarians.     Herbert Spencer     adopted into his    evolutionary    theory of ethics    the principle that the discriminating norm of right and wrong    is pleasure and pain, though he substituted the progress of     life for the     hedonistic end.  <\/p>\n<p>    Contemporary Hedonists are sometimes classed into    egoistic and altruistic. The classification,    however, is not quite satisfactory      when applied to writers; for many     Hedonists combine the egoistic with the     altruistic    principle. The distinction, however, may conveniently be    accepted with regard to the principles that underlie the    various forms of    the doctrine. The statement    that happiness is the end of    conduct at once raises the question: whose happiness? To this     egoism answers:    the happiness of the agent;    while altruistic    Hedonism replies: the happiness of all concerned, or, to    use a phrase that is classic in the     literature  of    this school, \"the greatest    happiness of the greatest     number\". Perhaps    the only thoroughgoing egoistic Hedonist is     Thomas Hobbes,    though in many places Bentham too, proclaims himself the    uncompromising apostle     of selfishness (see EGOISM), while elsewhere he, like    J.S. Mill, expands into altruism    . The intrinsic difficulties in the task of    constructing any decent code of morals on the egoistic principle,    together with the destructive     criticism which    any such attempts encountered, led Hedonists to    substitute the happiness of    all concerned for the happiness of the     individual. The    transit from the one to the other is attempted through a    psychological     analysis which    would show that, through the operation of the law of association of ideas, we come to    love for their own sakes    objects which in the first instance we loved from a selfish motive. This is    true to a certain extent,    but the cases in which it may occur fall far short of the range    which the principle would have to cover in order to     justify the    theory. Besides, by adopting        the happiness of others as    the end, the Hedonist loses the only semblance of a    proof which he had to     offer in support    of his first contention, that happiness is the end, viz. that    every man does desire happiness and can desire nothing    else; it is only too plain that not everybody desires the    happiness of everybody else.    Another modification was introduced to meet the     criticism that,    if pleasure is the standard of right and wrong, sensual    indulgence is just as good     as the noblest     form of    self-sacrifice. The Hedonists, or at least some of    them, replied that not merely the quantity of pleasure but also the    quality is to be taken into    account. There are higher and lower pleasures; and the higher    are more desirable than the lower; therefore conduct which aims    at the higher is the better. But if pleasures are thus to be    divided into higher and lower, irrespective of quantity, the hedonistic    standard is, by the very fact, displaced, and some other    ultimate scale of moral        valuation is appealed      to or implied. The subjective norm,    pleasurable feeling, is made to retire in favour of some    unnamed objective norm which dictates what the agent ought to    pursue. This is the suicide     of Hedonism. Other advocates of    the system have, contrary to its initial principle, introduced    a primary altruistic     impulse co-ordinate with and controlling    the egoistic as a spring of action    .   <\/p>\n<p>    The fundamental errors of     Hedonism and the chief unanswerable objections to the    theory may be briefly summed up as follows:  <\/p>\n<p>    (1) It rests on a false    psychological     analysis;    tendency, appetite, end, and    good are fixed    in nature    antecedent to pleasurable feeling. Pleasure depends on the    obtaining of some good     which is prior to, and     causative    of, the pleasure resulting from its acquisition. The happiness or pleasure attending     good conduct is    a consequence, not a constituent, of the     moral     quality of the     action.  <\/p>\n<p>    (2) It falsely supposes that pleasure is the only motive of     action. This    view it supports by the fallacy that the pleasurable and the    desirable are interchangeable terms.  <\/p>\n<p>    (3) Even if it were granted that pleasure and pain constitute    the standard of right and wrong, this standard would be utterly    impracticable. Pleasures      are not commensurable with one another,    nor with pains; besides no human mind can calculate the     quantity of    pleasure and pain that will result from a given     action. This    task is impossible even when only the pleasure of the agent is    to be taken into account. When the pleasure and pain of \"all    concerned\" are to be measured the proposal becomes nothing    short of an absurdity.  <\/p>\n<p>    (4) Egoistic Hedonism reduces all    benevolence, self-sacrifice, and love of the right to mere selfishness. It is    impossible for altruistic      Hedonism to evade the same    consummation except at the cost of consistency.  <\/p>\n<p>    (5) No general code of morality      could be established on the basis of    pleasure. Pleasure is essentially      subjective feeling, and only the     individual is    the competent judge     of how much pleasure or pain a course of     action affords    him. What is more pleasurable for one may be less so for    another. Hence, on hedonistic grounds, it is evident    that there could be no permanently and universally valid    dividing line between right and wrong.  <\/p>\n<p>    (6) Hedonism has no ground for     moral obligation, no     sanction for    duty. If I must pursue my    own happiness, and if    conduct which leads to ha<br \/>\nppiness is     good, the worst    reproach that can be addressed to me, however base my conduct    may be, is that I have made an imprudent choice.  <\/p>\n<p>    Hedonists have appropriated the term happiness as an equivalent to    the totality of pleasurable or agreeable feeling. The same word    is employed as the English      rendering of the     Latin    beatitudo and the Greek eudaimona, which    stand for a concept quite different from the     hedonistic one. The Aristotelean idea is more correctly rendered in     English by the    term well-being. It means the state of     perfection in    which man is    constituted when he exercises his highest faculty, in its    highest function, on its highest    good. Because they fail to give due attention to this    distinction, some writers include eudmonism among     hedonistic systems. Hedonism sometimes    claims the credit of much beneficent effort in     social    reform in England which has    been promoted by professed Utilitarians; and everywhere    movements popularly designated as     altruism  are    pointed out as monuments to the practical value of the     hedonistic principle \"the greatest     good of the    greatest number    \". But it must be observed that this    principle may have another genesis and another part to play in     ethics  than    those assigned to it by Hedonism. Besides, as Green    has pointed out, the Utilitarians illogically annexed it,    and the fruits it bore in their political activity are to be    credited to it in its democratic, rather than in its     hedonistic, character    .       <\/p>\n<p>      APA citation. Fox,      J. (1910). Hedonism. In The      Catholic Encyclopedia. New      York: Robert Appleton Company.       <a href=\"http:\/\/www.newadvent.org\/cathen\/07187a.htm\" rel=\"nofollow\">http:\/\/www.newadvent.org\/cathen\/07187a.htm<\/a>    <\/p>\n<p>      MLA citation. Fox,      James. \"Hedonism.\"      The Catholic Encyclopedia.      Vol. 7. New York: Robert Appleton Company,      1910.  <<a href=\"http:\/\/www.newadvent.org\/cathen\/07187a.htm\" rel=\"nofollow\">http:\/\/www.newadvent.org\/cathen\/07187a.htm<\/a>>.    <\/p>\n<p>      Transcription. This      article was transcribed for New Advent by Rick      McCarty.     <\/p>\n<p>      Ecclesiastical approbation. Nihil Obstat. June 1, 1910. Remy Lafort,      S.T.D., Censor. Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley,      Archbishop of New York.    <\/p>\n<p>      Contact information. The editor of New      Advent is Kevin Knight. My email address is webmaster      at newadvent.org. Regrettably, I can't reply to      every letter, but I greatly appreciate your feedback       especially notifications about typographical errors and      inappropriate ads.    <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>Originally posted here:<\/p>\n<p><a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\" href=\"http:\/\/www.newadvent.org\/cathen\/07187a.htm\" title=\"CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Hedonism - NEW ADVENT\">CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Hedonism - NEW ADVENT<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> Help support New Advent and get the full contents of this website as an instant download. Includes the Catholic Encyclopedia, Church Fathers, Summa, Bible and more all for only $19.99... 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