Over and over again in The
Swerve Professor Greenblatt uses the phrase “pursuit of happiness” or its
synonyms. The same phrase, of course, appears in the American Declaration of
Independence, a document that does not make the undersigned happy. Epicurus (and Professor Greenblatt) argue for a life
devoted to the p.o.h. The West “swerved” in that direction--and away from swine
Christianity--in the Renaissance, according to Greenblatt. Certainly that is
true; the Church began to lose its hold on European civil life at the beginning
of the Renaissance. And vive la swerve.
Is the “pursuit of happiness” all that? Eh, ooh, squirm. I have no quarrel with
“of.” Pursue: 1. to follow in order
to overtake, capture, kill or defeat. :o
2. to find or employ measures to
obtain or accomplish. Whew, praise be to Epicurus for #2. Very
goal-directed. What of e.g. Zen Buddhism, though? Say “Ohm,” (repeat) “Ohm,” and you will feel
p-e-a-c-e. Ohm. Not goal-directed. Don’t
other philosophies, spiritual systems teach similar things? Western thought is linear; the p.o.h. is linear: There is happiness; Go get it! Other thought has it that the more you
pursue a goal the less likely you are to obtain (or overtake, capture, kill, or
defeat) it. Others, Confucianism, counsel acceptance. Acceptance leads to
contentment. Contentment and p-e-a-c-e are not happiness though, right? Happiness:
1. a state of well-being and contentment. Well I’ll be darned. 2. a pleasurable or satisfying experience. Number 2 is the meaning I
have had in mind when I have been discontented with America the “Orgasmatron” society.
But who amongst us can gainsay #1, “a state of well-being and contentment?” Can you pursue
contentment, though? That’s just
repeating the Zen approach. Should you?
Should our lives be devoted to finding or employing measures to obtain
or accomplish contentment? Self-centered?
Yeah, well what else should we center on? Others?
Become other-centered? No orgasms (for us), no implants. Not much fun. Ohm.