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Living for Pleasure

An Epicurean Guide to Life (Guides to the Good Life)

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Living for Pleasure

By: Emily A. Austin
Narrated by: Diana Gardiner
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About this listen

If we all want happiness and pleasure so much, then why are we so bad at getting it?

Pleasure feels amazing! Anxiety, however, does not. The Ancient Greek Philosopher Epicurus rolled these two strikingly intuitive claims into a simple formula for happiness and well-being—pursue pleasure without causing yourself anxiety. But wait, is that even possible? Can humans achieve lasting pleasure without suffering anxiety about failure and loss? Epicurus thinks we can, at least once we learn to pursue pleasure thoughtfully.

In Living for Pleasure, philosopher Emily Austin offers a lively, jargon-free tour of Epicurean strategies for diminishing anxiety, achieving satisfaction, and relishing joys. Epicurean science was famously far ahead of its time, and Austin shows that so was its ethics and psychology. Epicureanism can help us make and keep good friends, prepare for suffering, combat imposter syndrome, build trust, recognize personal limitations, value truth, cultivate healthy attitudes towards money and success, manage political anxiety, develop gratitude, savor food, and face death.

Listeners will walk away knowing more about an important school of philosophy, but moreover understanding how to get what they want in life—happiness—without the anxiety of striving for it.

©2023 Oxford University Press (P)2025 G&D Media
Epistemology Ethics & Morality Greek & Roman History Philosophy Happiness
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Works extremely well as an audio book. There is very little I had a problem with so the following should not be seen as a serious criticism.
The subject related chapters are written to stand independently. There could be more linkage between these although I don’t know how this might have been achieved.
I found the comparison with embracing Stoicism in the modern world valuable. The author might have prodded the reader to consider the personal implication of the two approaches to matters in their own lives.

Links 300 BC to the present seamlessly

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