Wednesday, March 05, 2025

Pursuit of Happiness

I have posted at length here about the P.o.H., particularly it's elevation in our Dec. Ind. as a "right" co-equal with life and liberty. I have posted an alternative presented in the "I Wish You Enough" Chinese story.

I was so impressed with Prof. Dr. Dworkin's essay on intuition that I read his Wikipedia entry:

Ronald W. Dworkin has practiced anesthesiology at the Greater Baltimore Medical Center since 1989. In 1995, Dworkin was awarded a Ph.D. in political philosophy from the Johns Hopkins University.[1] He writes widely on topics where medical research intersects with political control, often focusing on what he sees as obsession with pushing happiness above all else. In other words, society likes to see unhappiness as a disease that must be stamped out with a mixture of drugs and denial. His book, Artificial Happiness published in 2006, lays out the dangers in the blind pursuit of happiness, arguing that it leads us to ignore or avoid some fundamental truths about life.

Richard John Neuhaus wrote of the book,

    A particular strength of Artificial Happiness is its treatment of the doping of millions of children with Ritalin and other drugs. We are running the grave risk of depriving the next generation of experiences that are essential to growing up. Sadness, failure, disappointment, and other aspects of unhappiness are both inevitable and necessary in learning and achievement. ...

I have my next book.