The Art of Happiness Quotes
The Art of Happiness
by
Epicurus6,202 ratings, 3.80 average rating, 518 reviews
Open Preview
The Art of Happiness Quotes
Showing 1-30 of 40
“Of all the means to insure happiness throughout the whole life, by far the most important is the acquisition of friends.”
― A Guide to Happiness
― A Guide to Happiness
“Accustom yourself to the belief that death is of no concern to us, since all good and evil lie in sensation and sensation ends with death. Therefore the true belief that death is nothing to us makes a mortal life happy, not by adding to it an infinite time, but by taking away the desire for immortality. For there is no reason why the man who is thoroughly assured that there is nothing to fear in death should find anything to fear in life. So, too, he is foolish who says that he fears death, not because it will be painful when it comes, but because the anticipation of it is painful; for that which is no burden when it is present gives pain to no purpose when it is anticipated. Death, the most dreaded of evils, is therefore of no concern to us; for while we exist death is not present, and when death is present we no longer exist. It is therefore nothing either to the living or to the dead since it is not present to the living, and the dead no longer are.”
― Lettera sulla felicità
― Lettera sulla felicità
“The purpose of all knowledge, metaphysical as well as scientific, is to achieve what Epicurus called ataraxia, freedom from irrational fears and anxieties of all sorts—in brief, peace of mind.”
― Lettera sulla felicità
― Lettera sulla felicità
“The most important consequence of self-sufficiency is freedom.”
― Lettera sulla felicità
― Lettera sulla felicità
“Men inflict injuries from hatred, jealousy or contempt, but the wise man masters all these passions by means of reason.”
― The Art of Happiness
― The Art of Happiness
“if a person fights the clear evidence of his senses he will never be able to share in genuine tranquillity”
― Lettera sulla felicità
― Lettera sulla felicità
“With the Epicureans it was never science for the sake of science but always science for the sake of human happiness.”
― Lettera sulla felicità
― Lettera sulla felicità
“The conquest of fear, especially fear of unaccountable divine beings who meddle in nature at will, means a reduction in the sum total of human pain and suffering and opens the door to the calm acceptance of a new picture of the world—a world in which nature is autonomous and where there are ideal beings who never meddle.”
― Lettera sulla felicità
― Lettera sulla felicità
“Two of Epicurus’s early influences, Democritus and Pyrrho, had actually journeyed all the way to what is now India, where they had encountered Buddhism in the schools of the gymnosophists”
― Lettera sulla felicità
― Lettera sulla felicità
“Of all the things that wisdom provides for the happiness of the whole man, by far the most important is the acquisition of friendship.”
― Lettera sulla felicità
― Lettera sulla felicità
“Epicurus as a moral empiricist felt that our immediate feelings are far more cogent and authoritative guides to the good life than abstract maxims, verbal indoctrination, or even the voice of reason itself. Hence he based his ethics on nature, not on convention or on reason.”
― Lettera sulla felicità
― Lettera sulla felicità
“If a person fights the clear evidence of his senses he will never be able to share in genuine tranquillity.”41 In other words, a person who doubts his senses will either lose contact with the reality of the surrounding world, like the Skeptics, and become psychologically isolated and insecure, or he will fall prey, as do the religionists, to theological explanations which do not allay anxiety but foment it.”
― Lettera sulla felicità
― Lettera sulla felicità
“If you summarily rule out any single sensation and do not make a distinction between the element of belief that is superimposed on a percept that awaits verification and what is actually present in sensation or in the feelings or some percept of the mind itself, you will cast doubt on all other sensations by your unfounded interpretation and consequently abandon all the criteria of truth. On the other hand, in cases of interpreted data, if you accept as true those that need verification as well as those that do not, you will still be in error, since the whole question at issue in every judgment of what is true or not true will be left intact.”
― Lettera sulla felicità
― Lettera sulla felicità
“The risings and settings of the sun, the moon, and the other heavenly bodies may come about from the lighting up and quenching of their fires…; for nothing in our sensory experience runs counter to this hypothesis. Or the said effects may be caused by the emergence of these bodies from a point above the earth and again by the earth’s position in front of them; for nothing in our sensory experience is against this.45 Here two alternative explanations of “risings and settings” are offered; both are of equal value and equally true, since neither is contradicted by anything in our experience. On the contrary, we have all seen fires die down from lack of fuel, and lights obscured or blacked out by objects coming in front of them.”
― Lettera sulla felicità
― Lettera sulla felicità
“The esteem of others is outside our control; we must attend instead to healing ourselves.”
― Being Happy
― Being Happy
“Let no one be slow to seek wisdom when he is young nor weary in the search of it when he has grown old. For no age is too early or too late for the health of the soul.”
― Lettera sulla felicità
― Lettera sulla felicità
“Death means nothing to us”
― The Art of Happiness
― The Art of Happiness
“The blessed and indestructible being of the divine has no concerns of its own, nor does it make trouble for others. It is not affected by feelings of anger or benevolence, because these are found where there is lack of strength.”
― Lettera sulla felicità
― Lettera sulla felicità
“We must laugh and philosophize and manage our households and look after our other affairs all at the same time, and never stop proclaiming the words of the true philosophy.”
― Lettera sulla felicità
― Lettera sulla felicità
“Nothing is sufficient for the person who finds sufficiency too little.”
― Lettera sulla felicità
― Lettera sulla felicità
“panta rei (“All things are in flux”),”
― Lettera sulla felicità
― Lettera sulla felicità
“Today the doctrine of metaphysical free will appears to us as one of those archaic relics of traditional religion that Epicurus and Lucretius should have done their utmost to combat. Moral freedom and determinism are by no means incompatible. Man is himself a causal agent in nature and is morally responsible when he acts “freely,” i.e., from his own settled character and in his own capacity as an individual, provided he is exempt from external force or pressure.”
― Lettera sulla felicità
― Lettera sulla felicità
“A free man cannot acquire many possessions, because this is no easy feat without becoming a hireling of mobs or dynasts. And yet he has a constant abundance of everything, and if he should chance to gain many possessions, he could easily portion them out so as to win his neighbors’ good will.”
― Lettera sulla felicità
― Lettera sulla felicità
“One who understands the limits of the good life knows that what eliminates the pains brought on by need and what makes the whole of life perfect is easily obtained, so that there is no need for enterprises that entail the struggle for success.19”
― Lettera sulla felicità
― Lettera sulla felicità
“Unlike at the Academy or the Lyceum, women, some of them concubines and mistresses, as well as a few slaves, joined the conversation; further, many of the students here had arrived without academic credentials in mathematics or music, de rigueur for entry to the other Athenian schools of higher learning. Everyone in the Garden radiated earnestness and good cheer. The subject under discussion was happiness.”
― Lettera sulla felicità
― Lettera sulla felicità
“It is not true religion to be seen turning with veiled head ever and anon toward an image of stone, or drawing nigh to every god's altar, or prostrating oneself on the ground with suppliant hands before the holy shrines; nor is it piety to wet the altars with the abundant blood of beasts and to twine vow with vow. True religion is rather the power to contemplate nature with a mind set at peace.”
― The Art of Happiness
― The Art of Happiness
“Don’t ruin the things you have by wanting what you don’t have, but realize that they too are things you once did wish for.”
― Being Happy
― Being Happy
“The strong stand taken by the Epicureans against all these tendencies was taken not in the name of science and human knowledge alone but in the name of human happiness, on the reasonable assumption that if men know the true nature of reality they are more likely to be happy than if they do not. Hence the happy and the good life presupposes knowing and knowing how to know.”
― The Art of Happiness
― The Art of Happiness
“El futuro ni depende enteramente de nosotros ni tampoco nos es totalmente ajeno, de modo que no debemos esperarlo como si hubiera de venir infaliblemente ni tampoco desesperarnos como si no hubiera de venir nunca.”
― Lettera sulla felicità
― Lettera sulla felicità
“La morte, il più terribile dei mali, non è niente. Quando ci siamo noi la morte non c'è, e quando c'è lei noi non siamo più.”
― Lettera sulla felicità
― Lettera sulla felicità
