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  • This is a philosopher who helps us think about money, capitalism, and our runaway consumer societies

  • Epicurus was an Ancient Greek born in 341 BC.

  • What made him famous was that he spent all his life trying to work out the largest puzzle there is:

  • what makes people happy?

  • Philosophers before him had discussed at length what could make people good

  • Epicurus preferred to look at what is fun

  • Unfortunately, the world was bitter and bitchy even then

  • and when people heard that Epicurus had set up a school to study happiness

  • the rumors went off the scale

  • There were tales that the school hosted ten course feasts, and orgies every night

  • Epicurus was said, by one critic, to have orgasmed 18 times in a single evening in a bed full of virgins

  • It wasn't true

  • Epicurus and his team were studying happiness, but they were doing it very soberly

  • The philosopher owned only two cloaks, and lived on bread, olives, and for a treat, an occasional slice of cheese

  • As for the bedroom, he merely responded demurely that he'd married philosophy

  • Having patiently studied happiness for many years

  • Epicurus came to a set of remarkable and revolutionary conclusions about what we actually need to be happy

  • He proposed that we typically make 3 mistakes when thinking about happiness:

  • Firstly, we think happiness means having romantic, sexual relationships

  • but Epicurus looked around and saw so many unhappy couples

  • their unions marred by jealousy, misunderstanding, cheating, and bitterness

  • at the same time, he observed how much nicer friendships are:

  • How people tend to be so decent and unpossessive with their friends

  • Friendship seemed to be where human nature was at its sweetest

  • The only problem Epicurus noted was that we don't see our friends enough

  • The next thing we ordinary think that we need to be happy is a lot of money

  • but we tend not properly to factually the unbelievable sacraficies we gotta have to make to get this money:

  • The jealousy, the backbiting, the long hours

  • What makes work really satisfying, Epicurus believed, ins't money

  • but it was able to work alone, or in small groups, like in a bakery, or boat repair shop

  • and when we feel we helping others

  • in our own, minor way improving the world

  • Isn't really large sums or status

  • that we want deep down

  • Its a sense of making a diference

  • and lastely

  • Epicurus observes how obsessive we are with luxury

  • especially involving houses and beautiful serene locations

  • but beneath our love of luxury there is really something else we trying to get out

  • What we want is a feeling of calm

  • We want our minds pure, free...

  • Not full of the normal boredom and chaos

  • But the great question is: Does luxury actually make us calm?

  • Epicurus wasn't so sure...

  • Having looked happiness in depth

  • Epicurus anounces a revolution reset of insights

  • That we really need only three things to be happy in this life

  • Firstly

  • You need your friends around

  • No sex, no orgy, just your mates

  • Enough of seen them only now and then

  • Its regularity of contact that counts

  • So he did that thing that most of us ocasionally dream of doing

  • but never actualy get around do

  • He bought a big house and start living with all his friends

  • Everyone had your own quarters and there was pleasant share areas too

  • There's always someone nice to talk to you in the kitchen

  • Secondly

  • Everyone downshifted

  • All the members of the comune stop working for other people

  • They took big pay cuts in return for doing their own stuff

  • some farming, some cooking, some potring or writing

  • And thirdly

  • Epicurus and his friends stop thinking you could be calm just by having a beautiful view to look out to

  • They devote themselfes to finding calm in their own minds

  • To spending time on their own, reflecting, writing stuff down, reading things, meditating

  • The experiment was so successful, the members of the comune so happy

  • the idea spread like wildfire

  • Epicurean communities open up all around the mediterranean

  • at height of the movement

  • there was four hundred thousand people living in comunes from Spain to Palestine

  • It was only the christian church that ending things in the fifth century

  • But in most of the respect to the community somehow

  • cause they converted all in to monasteries

  • what we know as monasteries are really just epicurean comunes

  • with a christian top soil

  • Another interesting fact: Karl Marx it's Ph.D thesis on Epicurus

  • and what we call communism, a gigantic

  • failed system

  • it's really a grown up, corrupted, not very successful version of epicureanism

  • The real Legacy of Epicurus is that human beings aren't very good make themselves happy

  • especially because they think it's so easy

  • We think we know, it's about sex, money, luxury

  • We just want to how to secure all this

  • but no, says Epicurus

  • Reflect on the moments that truly bring you happiness

  • and they are to do with this

  • Have the courage to change your life, in accordance with the moments that actually delivery satisfaction

  • You might end up living in a very different way

  • Out in the country with just some cheese, a couple of clothes, a few philosophy books and

  • some very good friends down the corridor

This is a philosopher who helps us think about money, capitalism, and our runaway consumer societies

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