Happiness - A History
Happiness - A History
Happiness - A History
A HISTORY
DARRIN M. McMAHOK T
$27.50
HAPPINESS:
A HISTORY
Atlantic
A
Monthly Press
New York
McMahon, Darrin M.
Happiness : a history / Darrin M. McMahon.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN- 10: 0-871 13-886-7
ISBN-13: 978-0-871 13-886-6
1. Happiness — History. 2. Happiness — Social aspects. I. Title.
BJ1481.M46 2005
170—dc22 2005048009
841 Broadway
New York, NY 10003
www.groveatlantic.com
06 07 08 09 10 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2
For Courtney, partner in pursuit,
who has endured all the moods
that writing a book on happiness entails,
and invented some of her own
Contents
Preface xi
2 Perpetual Felicity 66
3 From Heaven to Earth 140
4 Self-Evident Truths 197
Notes 485
Index 529
My steps have held fast to your paths; my feet have not slipped.
—Psalm 17:5
Preface
of this "thing" that is not a thing, this hope, this yearning, this dream?
As another German philosopher, Immanuel Kant, rightly observed,
xii Preface
it is more daunting still to know that countless men and women have
spent their entire lives searching for this very "thing," only to have it
elude their grasp. Was happiness like Eurydice of Greek myth, I won-
dered, who slips from our arms when we turn to behold her, disap-
beings always felt this way? Is it correct to assume, with Freud's con-
times the secret motive of all they do, and of all they are willing to
endure"? 4 Is happiness eternal — universal — or does it have a history,
a specific record of time and place?
The title of this book alone, of course, reveals my conviction that,
cally. But let me draw attention to the indefinite article from the start.
This is a history of happiness, not the history of happiness; it makes no
such grandiose claims. On the contrary, writing this book has made
me painfully aware of how much I have had to leave out. There are
infinite histories of happiness to be written — histories not only of the
gentiles and Jews. There are fascinating national and regional varia-
tory on the experience of "the West" (an imperfect term that I use
broadly for lack of a better, without celebration or geographical preci-
sion), it is undoubtedly the case that happiness might be studied fruit-
6
fully from a variety of different cultural and historical perspectives.
As the recent international success of the Dalai Lama's The Art of Hap-
piness: A Handbook for Living makes clear, the search for happiness is
now a global concern, one with roots, however shallow or deep, in many
different cultural and religious traditions. In the end, William James
may well have been right. Perhaps happiness is, was, and ever shall be
the ultimate human end in every time and place.
xiv Preface
Yet it is also perfectly clear that the manner in which men and
women understand happiness — how they propose, and whether they
thought." 7
Although I have no intention of attempting anything so rash as a
"history of mankind," I do believe that a history of happiness, at least
this perennial human end and the strategies devised to attain it, as
would add, political contexts. For whatever else it might be (and it is,
past — a past, as we shall see, that has not always been a happy affair.
here.
that the history of happiness (or the history of any subject, for that 7
young scholars are doing right now, from the standpoint of literary
criticism. 9 In the study of happiness, as in the study of most things,
methodological pluralism is only to be encouraged.
Having said this, I do feel strongly that the approach adopted in this
One last editorial remark. Anthony Ashley Cooper, the third Earl of
Shaftesbury and an important eighteenth-century moralist, once
asked, "If Philosophy be, as we take it, the Study of Happiness, must
not everyone, in some manner or other, either skillfully or unskillfully
sounding yes. And so I have tried here to reach out to that perhaps
mythic, certainly endangered, species, "the ordinary reader," writing
without condescension, I hope, but at the same time with a self-
introduction:
The Tragedy
of happiness
work of history in the West The History of Herodotus —we find the
having passed away in their sleep after pulling their mother to a vil-
Darrin M. McMahon 3
epic period of Homer and Hesiod in the eight and ninth centuries
bce. 4 Herodotus makes use, for example, of the term olbios, which,
along with its close cousin makarios, may be rendered (imperfectly) as
"blessed." In the Homeric hymns and the Hesiodic poems, these com-
plex terms are used frequently in reference to the heroes, to the gods,
and to those who enjoy their favor, indicating divine sanction, free-
dom from suffering, and general prosperity, both material and moral.
Thus, in the Homeric Hymn to Apollo, the master of the Cretans ad-
dresses a god disguised as an ordinary man with some confusion:
"Stranger —though you are nothing like mortal men in shape or stat-
ure, but are as the immortal gods — hail and all happiness to you,"
employing here a variant of olbios. But 5
in the Hymn to Hermes, the poet
uses a form of'makarios to describe the cave dwelling of the god Hermes
and his mother, which is full of "nectar and lovely ambrosia," with
"much silver and gold," fine clothing, and other things "such as are
kept in the sacred houses of the blessed." Like the Olympians who
know no hardship and are beautifully clad, richly fed, and secure in
their possessions and persons, those who are olbios or makarios are simi-
larly favored.
6
They are, one might say, "fortunate." And so we find
Herodotus, and through him, Solon, speaking of those who possess
what Croesus claims to enjoy as having eutychia, or "luck." To live in
ing, favored life. The word was first employed in extant Greek litera-
ture by Hesiod. "Happy and lucky the man" {eudaimon te kai olbios) , he
declares in the Work and Days, who knows and keeps the holy days, who
understands omens, who avoids transgression, and "who does his work
7
without offending the deathless gods." But the word was emerging in
daimon is an emissary of the gods who watches over each of us, acting
"Daimon is occult power, a force that drives men forward where no agent
can be named," and it is this aspect of the term that helps to account
for the unpredictable force that leads Croesus, like all men, impelling
8
him forward in pursuit of he knows not what. For if to have a good
daimon means to be carried in the direction of the divine, to have a bad
daimon, a dysdaimon (or kakadaimon) is to be turned aside, led astray, or
may. Her name is simply a variation on the Greek word for unhappy,
dysdaimon, as Shakespeare certainly knew. He was probably also aware
that daimon is the Greek root of the modern word "demon," a fiend or
Croesus, you asked me, you who know that the Divine is
much to see that one would rather not see —and much to
suffer likewise. I put the boundary of human life at seventy
years. These seventy years have twenty-five thousand two
hundred days, not counting [leap years] ... so that all the
days of a man's life are twenty-six thousand two hundred and
fifty; of all those days not one brings to him anything exactly
the same as another. So, Croesus, man is entirely what befalls
him. To me it is clear that you are very rich, and it is clear
that you are the king of many men; but the thing that you
asked me I cannot say of you yet, until I hear that you have
brought your life to an end well. 9
Darrin M. McMahon 5
of early Greek life in the manner by which it has largely come down
to us — as myth —imagining it, deliciously, as a sunny, sensual affair,
that children were as apt to die before their fifth birthday as to live
It is in part for this reason that Solon judges Tellus, Cleobis, and
Biton worthy of the epithet of "happy." All three successfully negoti-
ated life's perils while they lived, and then died with honor at the
moment of their greatest glory. Of Tellus, we are told:
In the first place, [his] city was in a good state when he had
sons —good and beautiful they were —and he saw children in
let of life without falling and to leave it with honor and grace.
Cleobis and Biton also performed this most perilous of feats. Blessed
with "sufficiency of livelihood and besides, a strength of body," these
two prizewinning athletes from the Argive were late in taking their
mother to a temple for the feast of Hera. Unharnessing the oxen that
pulled their cart, they drew it themselves at a much faster pace for
many miles, and when they arrived, they were seen by all who had
gathered for the feast:
The Argive men came and stood around the young men,
congratulating them on their strength, and the women con-
gratulated the mother on the fine sons she had; and the
mother, in her great joy at what was said and done, stood right
in front of the statue and there prayed for Cleobis and Biton,
her own sons, who had honored her so signally, that the
goddess should give them whatsoever is best for a man to win.
After that prayer the young men sacrificed and banqueted and
laid them down to sleep in the temple where they were; they
never rose more, but that was the end in which they were
held. 11
equally to rich and poor. Although wealth may help to satisfy our de-
sires and even shield us from certain pains, it can do nothing, ulti-
mately, to withstand ill fortune or the wrath of the gods, for "no single
person is self-sufficient." Shortly after Solon's departure, Croesus
learns the awful truth of those words, receiving "a great visitation of
exclaims, calling out three times the name of the Athenian sage and
recounting his own fate for the benefit of all who "are in their own
eyes blessed." 13 Only when Croesus has fully repented is the god
moved. "Suddenly, out of a clear sky, with no wind in it, there gath-
ered clouds, and a storm burst and a violent rain with it; and the fire
was quenched." Croesus is saved at the final hour, but only after he
has renounced the belief that he was, or ever can be, happy while still
alive.
8 Happiness
"tragedy" {tragoidia) took the stage as a new word and a new form of
In this play, as in so many others of the genre, the only salvation for
the titular hero is through the unlikely intervention of a god. Just as
the heavens opened to shower rain on Croesus atop his pyre, Her-
cules arrives at the final moment of Sophocles's play to extricate
Philoctetes from his plight. Hercules is a deus ex machina {theos ek
the tale of Croesus shares many features of the same tragic outlook.
voked the wrath of the gods. And though Croesus surely contributes
to his own demise through his misinterpretation of the oracle, his
so much for what he has done as for the kind of world he inhabits, a
world in which "fate that is decreed, no-one can escape," a world in
which "no one who lives is happy." 14 Where human agency is frus-
trated, human choice contradictory, and human suffering inevitable,
happiness, if it comes at all, is largely what befails us. That is the tragic
predicament.
—
10 Happiness
but live, from day to day, like beasts and know nothing/ of what God
plans tomake happen to each of us," he was merely articulating the
long-standing wisdom of his ancestors. A surviving fragment of an-
other of Semonides's pearls of wisdom
— "A women thick around the
ankles is no good" — may give us pause in accepting his general au-
15
thority without reservation. But with respect to his account of the
human condition, at least, we can be confident that his judgment
was widely shared. Harking back to a perennial, prehistoric view of
mind-set animates the epic poetry of Homer, for whom the gods
alone are the "blessed ones," and human beings "of all creatures that
breathe and crawl across the earth" the most dismal, the most ago-
nized. 16 A similar outlook is central to the stories of classical Greek
mythology, of ancient Egypt, and of a great many other traditional
cultures.
This fact helps account for the longevity of the link connecting
happiness to luck and fate.* That link held fast long after the fifth
*Strictly speaking, luck and fate are opposed, in that one implies randomness and
the other preestablished order. When considered from the standpoint of human
happiness, however, the two are closely related, in that each denies the role of
human agency in determining the course of human events. Whether the universe is
for example, is the Middle English and Old Norse happ, meaning
chance, fortune, what happens in the world, giving us such words as
"happenstance," "haphazard," "hapless," and "perhaps." The French
bonheur, similarly, derives from bon (good) and the Old French heur
(fortune or luck), an etymology that is perfectly consistent with the
Middle High German Gliick, still the German word for happiness and
luck. In Italian, Spanish, and Portuguese, felititajelicidad, and felicidade
all stem from the Latin felix (luck, sometimes fate), and the Greek
eudaimonia brings together good fortune and good god. One could
multiply these examples at much greater length, but the point would
be the same: In the Indo-European language families, happiness has
deep roots in the soil of chance.
12 Happiness
accident. And most of us are probably willing to allow, rather more pro-
there is no greater modern assumption than that it lies within our power
Granted, the idea was not entirely without precedent. Just as some
human beings had long imagined happiness to lie in a remote,
otherworldly place — in the fields of Elysium, say, or the islands of the
blessed, in the Hyperborean regions, in Heaven, Paradise, or a van-
ished Golden Age — others had been prepared to speculate on the pros-
pects of happiness on earth. Yet in both classical philosophy and
Christian practice, happiness of this immanent variety was exceed-
ingly rare — the preserve of a "happy few," whose outstanding virtue
or exceptional favor made them more than mere men. As Aristotle
observed, a life of happiness "would be superior to the human level,"
tantamount to the divine. 20 His happy few were a "godlike" few —
description that applies equally well to the Socratic sage or the Pla-
tonic philosopher, the Stoic ascetic or the Epicurean wise man, the
Catholic saint or Calvin's predestined elect. In all of those incarna-
tions, the happy man —and less frequently, the happy woman was —
thought of as one who approached the gods, who had gone beyond the
Darrin M. McMahon 13
the lofty goal articulated in the last line of the document's preamble
securing the "happiness of all." A great human pursuit had begun. It
continues still.
The first half of this book examines the ways in which a classical
and Christian concept was transformed into an earthly end. The sec-
ond half investigates the ambiguities of this coming to earth. For what
did it really mean to demand, and to expect, a lifetime of happiness in
14 Happiness
not others have a duty to provide it? To what extent were happiness
make more of man — to ask him to rise above — than to feed him the
ambrosia that had been taken from heaven, to deliver him his due. And
over time, this would create a sense of entitlement and expectation that
was fraught with danger. Even in a post-Enlightened world, the attempt
by mortals to walk on hallowed ground — to become gods themselves or
to banish them altogether —was a perilous affair. The Greeks had called
it hubris, excessive pride, the refusal to accept the natural limits that
separated the sacred from the profane. And they raised the specter of
divine retribution for those who dared to cross that line, the suffering
and sadness visited upon the tragic heroes who reached (overreached)
for what was fit only for the gods. "Many are the forms of the daimon-ly,
many things unhoped-for the gods bring to pass" was the stereotyped
conclusion to Euripidean tragedies. 21 There were good daimones and bad
Darrin M. McMahon 15
daimones, good demons and bad demons: To be under the spell of either
was to be haunted and possessed.
To think of the search for happiness in this sense as a form of pos-
session —possession by an alien force that moves through us, like the
force that carried Croesus to his doom —may help account in mythic
terms for a phenomenon that commentators long after the Greeks have
described in different ways: the frustrating tendency of the search for
happiness to lead human beings astray. It is this tendency to which
Aeschylus gave voice when he complained of the "deceitful deception"
of the gods, asking, "What mortal man shall avoid it?"
Many since have been moved to similar reflections, and together they
raise a disturbing prospect for all who live in a post-Enlightened age.
Might not the search for happiness entail own undoing? Does not
its
The Making of
a Modern Faith
The mere search for higher happiness, not merely its actual
attainment, is a prize beyond all human wealth or honor or
physical pleasure.
—Cicero, fragment from the lost manuscript Hortensius
For the gate is narrow and the way is hard that leads to life,
—Matthew 7:14
1
does in many pockets of the world. Sharpened and refined in the fifth
century bce by Herodotus and the tragic playwrights of Athens, this
view received its consummate expression in their work. Yet ironically,
—
20 Happiness
in that same time and place, a new perspective on happiness was tak-
ing shape. At its most basic level, this view held that human beings
might hope to influence their fate through actions of their own.
Perhaps we should not be surprised by the coincidence. For do we
not see already in the striving of Herodotus's Croesus, or in the heroic
efforts of the protagonists of the tragic stage, evidence of a yearning
to break free of the confines of a fatalistic world, to challenge the
caprice of fortune, to resist the final verdict of the gods? "Fate that
is decreed, no man can escape" is the summary judgment of Herod-
otus. But the crime of Croesus, like that of the heroes of Sophocles,
roic account of the Greeks' victory over the armies of the Persian
empire in the early fifth century bce, a feat that was due in no small
measure to their courage, savvy, and will. Herodotus himself took pains
to emphasize the point, extolling the Greeks for their love of freedom.
ways. But almost all made some provision for citizens to participate
directly in the affairs of the polls, whether through approval of the
decisions of military leaders, participation in the law-courts, voting on
measures of public importance, or institutionalized debate. As one
leading historian observes, "politics," in the sense of "direct partici-
pation in the making of rational choices after discussion," was "cen-
tral to all Greek cities."
1
By the beginning of the fifth century, some
measure of self-government was a distinctive feature of Greek politi-
cal life.
This was a shared feature of classical Greek culture. But it was above
all in the polls of Athens that the common process of self-government
and self-rule was furthest advanced. Building on a system of law that
had been laid down first by the chief magistrate Solon at the begin-
ning of the sixth century (the same Solon who figures centrally, if
dinary body, which for critical votes might require a quorum as large
22 Happiness
as six thousand to get under way, the ecclesia was in many respects the
closest thing to direct democracy the world has ever known. Persons
of rank and fortune inevitably exercised considerable influence there,
as they did in the much smaller Council of Five Hundred (the boule),
which reviewed and referred business to the larger body. But on the
whole, the citizens of Athens governed themselves with remarkable
equality. 3
with merit; nor again does poverty bar the way, if a man is
Mediterranean, Athens was rich, and it put that wealth to good use,
constructing the Parthenon and many of the other architectural trea-
sures that stand to this day. "We provide plenty of means for the mind
Darrin M. McMahon 23
while the magnitude of our city draws the produce of the world into
our harbor, so that to the Athenian the fruits of other countries are as
familiar a luxury as those of his own." 5 Rich, cosmopolitan, pleasure-
loving, Athens could also afford to indulge the life of the mind, produc-
ing not only great works of tragedy and history but also poetry, art, and
philosophy as well. Periclean Athens, truly, was a golden age.
and selective, it left a good deal unsaid. The general made no men-
tion of the fact that the same Athenian empire that brought such
riches to the metropole could rule over its colonies with an iron fist.
Nor did he dwell on the unsettling truth that his "free" city was built
on the backs of slaves, who numbered as many as a hundred thousand
by the end of the fourth century bce; or that women and resident for-
duct, can exercise control over their lives. Socrates's achievement was
to apply this same spirit to the pursuit of happiness. In doing so, he
created a longing that would fascinate classical minds for centuries,
and that has haunted human beings ever since.
legedly denying the city's gods and corrupting its youth. A citizen,
he served bravely as a soldier. He had a wife, but he seems to have
preferred the company of younger men, who flocked to him as a
teacher and guide. He was not rich, and was apparently quite ugly,
though charismatic and seductive; and he cultivated the art of asking
questions — difficult questions —with consummate skill.
Beyond these bare details, our knowledge is sketchy, and the little
9
the form and content of his teachings. Plato was a much younger man,
who lived from c. 427 to c. 347 bce. Inevitably, he altered a great deal,
happiness is within the human grasp. "What being is there who does
not desire happiness?," he asks his companions in Plato's early dia-
logue, the Euthydemus. "Well, then," he answers, "since we all of us
desire happiness, how can we be happy? — that is the next question." 10
Transforming Croesus's quest from an outrageous act of hubris to the
highest form of inquiry, Socrates grounds the search for happiness in
natural human longing. "Nor is there any need to ask why a man desires
happiness," he reiterates elsewhere; "the answer is already final." 11
That desire, says Socrates, is self-evident.
lier, less than a decade after the death of Herodotus, in roughly 416,
the work is an imaginative reconstruction of an actual banquet held at
the house of the Athenian poet Agathon, not far from the Theater of
Dionysus. The tragedies of Sophocles were still being performed
there, but the guests have gathered on this occasion to pay homage to
another playwright —Agathon himself—who has been awarded a prize
for tragoidta in the City Dionysia. The guests, who include Socrates,
the comic dramatist Aristophanes, and a small group of Athenian no-
tables, are distinguished, and the mood is festive, befitting a party.
difficult to find. For all their talk of suffering, the Greeks knew how
to enjoy themselves. It is noteworthy that some of the earliest Greek
—the celebrated
sculpture statues of adolescent males
kouroi, large in
convey that a tragic outlook on life need not spoil a brave or cheerful
face. The wrath of the gods could show itself at any moment. But this
was all the more reason to make the most of their indulgence, to rel-
parading through town of a giant phallus to raise the mood: All this
Darrin M. McMahon 27
"in drink one can raise this [his prick] to a stand, catch a handful of
and he has waiting for him the fresh, young body of his voluptuous
mistress upon her bed, and his locks all gleaming with myrrh he says,
19
'Who will open the door for me?'" Friendship, love, a bellyful of
wine —perhaps, as the satyr suggests, "dancing and forgetfulness of
cares" —were ever at hand to take the sting from the pain of existence.
The Greeks made full use of all these palliatives when they could.
The opportunities were abundant. In addition to the City Dionysia,
there were countless religious festivals and processions, like the pil-
of his dialogue. The word remains familiar today, although it is far more
likely to summon images of sober gatherings, plastic name tags, and
daylong retreats than riotous evenings during which drunkenness and
debauchery often played a central role. But riotous is what the sym-
posia could easily be: privileged male dinner parties that began with
feasting and ended with fucking, fueled by binge drinking and some-
times fighting along the way. 20 The comic playwright Eubulus de-
scribes the degeneration of the symposium as the wine flowed in ever
cially designed men's room where the symposium itself was held, to
coholic riot.
Where violence was lacking, other passions might play. The mirth
of a great many symposia was enhanced by the presence of hetaera, a
sort of elegant Greek geisha or call girl whose many services included
(but were not limited to) music making and scintillating conversation.
For those so inclined, the pretty wine pourer or flute boy might be
open to seduction, and if nothing else, he was usually good to look at.
Now the floor is swept clean, and the hands of all who are
present are washed, and the cups are clean. One puts the
garlands on, another passes the fragrant myrrh on a dish. The
mixing bowl is set up and stands by, full of the spirit of cheer,
24
Merriment and singing fill all the corners of the house.
safe to assume that, at least in many cases, one added set of shoul-
ders was required to complete the journey.
Such ritualized debauchery may well call to mind the image of the
stag night or the fraternity party, replete with call girls and vomit and
the breaking of things. That image tends to clash with a received sense
of the symposium as a refined and rarified occasion. And though part
of the reason for this disjuncture is likely our own failure of imagina-
tion — a tendency to idealize the Greeks, rendering them more lofty
than they actually were — it also probably owes something to the en-
during legacy of the Symposium itself. For Plato's account of the drink-
Darrin M. McMahon 31
ing party creates a very different impression of this central Greek in-
stitution.
In the first place, Plato tells us, Agathon's guests agree shortly after
the meal to forgo any hard or forced drinking. A number of the com-
pany admit to suffering hangovers from the night before, but the
choice is nonetheless portentous, as much an effort to set the party's
mood in advance as a concession to weak constitutions. Next, the
guests voluntarily dispatch with the flute girl, ensuring that their
glances will not be distracted by fetching limbs. Music, at this gather-
ing, will be made by words alone. Finally, the philosopher Socrates is
closely to the model that Plato had already suggested in his early dia-
tion, you will see neither flute-girls nor dancing girls nor harp-girls,
but only the company contenting themselves with their own conver-
sation, and none of these fooleries and frolics —each speaking and lis-
27
tening decently in turn." Proper education necessarily entails for
"the oldest of the gods, the most deserving of our respect, and the
most useful for those men . . . who want to attain virtue and happi-
ness," observes Phaedrus, the first speaker of the evening. 28 Somewhat
later, the doctor Eryximachus adds that the influence of the "great
and awe-inspiring" Eros is "unbounded" and "absolute," capable of
bringing us "complete happiness," while Aristophanes, after recover-
ing from a bout of hiccups, notes that "Eros is the most friendly to-
ward men . . . our helper, [who] cures those evils whose cure brings
the greatest happiness to the human race." 29 Agathon, in a grand rhe-
torical flourish befitting a poet, concludes that though all the gods are
happy, Eros is "the most happy, since he is the most beautiful and the
best." 30
To this much, all the participants save the still-silent Socrates agree.
But beyond Eros's power and proximity to happiness, there is little
else on which the guests can establish common ground. One speaker,
celebrated fable that human beings were originally joined two at a time
to form complete wholes. Overly powerful, these four-legged creatures
provoked the suspicion of the gods, who had them sundered to reduce
their strength; now each half walks the earth in search of its other.
The fable explains our sexual orientation, for men originally joined to
men will seek their complement in the same sex, while those origi-
nally joined to women will seek their other half accordingly. It also
explains our sense of longing and loss, as we wander the earth in search
of the one who will make us whole. "[W]here happiness for the human
races lies," Aristophanes concludes, is "in the successful pursuit of love."
Eros is the great benefactor who will "[return] us to our original condi-
tion, healing us, and making us blessed and perfectly happy." 32
A pantheistic force animating the world; a schizophrenic deity both
plebeian and patrician; a guide who leads us only to ourselves: Eros,
34 Happiness
of Aphrodite, the goddess of beauty and love, Eros is the child of Pov-
erty, who came to the festivities uninvited as a beggar, and the god
Plenty, a welcome guest who passed out there drunk. How Plenty is
the gods), but perform he does, producing a son who is neither "mor-
tal nor immortal." Now fully grown, Eros takes after his mother. Con-
stantly in need, he is "hard, unkempt, barefoot, homeless." But, like
these two qualities through love, as befits one conceived in the pres-
ence of Aphrodite. 34
Straddling the human and the divine, Eros is an emissary, con-
ducting "all association and communication, waking or sleeping,"
35
between the gods and men. His twofold nature explains his defin-
ing characteristic —desire itself. For what is desire but the human
acknowledgment that one is in need, that one is lacking? As Socrates
explains, "the man who desires something desires what is not avail-
36
able to him, and what he doesn't already have in his possession." And
what is it that Eros lacks? Precisely those qualities that surrounded
him at the moment of his divine conception, the qualities held by the
self-sufficient gods: goodness and beauty, or, in a word, happiness, for
to be "happy means possessing what is good and beautiful." 37 Part
human, Eros is incomplete —he yearns; part god, he yearns for what is
godlike, happiness.
Unfortunately, like all who know his power, Eros is easily misled,
prone to seek the good in places it cannot be found: in the pursuit of
money, for example; in purely carnal sex,
in fame, in people who do us
harm. Midway between the gods and men, Eros is also "midway be-
tween wisdom and folly," rendering desire a volatile force. Elsewhere,
in his greatest dialogue, the Republic, Plato dwells at length on the
Darrin M. McMahon 35
face can catch sight of the dark potential of Eros in their dreams, where
uninhibited desire will shrink from nothing, including murder or "try-
ing to have sex with a mother ... or with anyone else at all, whether
38
man, god, or beast." It is not difficult to see why Sigmund Freud
would later find in the "Eros of the divine Plato" an important prece-
dent for his own work. 39
For Plato, Eros's potential for wickedness and folly demanded that
the right way. In the Symposium, Socrates begins to sketch the out-
lines of this education of desire, suggesting that the ascent to hap-
piness will be a long and arduous process. Beginning in youth, the
potential lover of the good is led gradually from the love of the physi-
climbing from the love of one person to love of two; from two
to love of all physical beauty; from physical beauty to beauty
inhuman behavior; thence to beauty in subjects of study;
from them he arrives finally at that branch of knowledge
36 Happiness
ried out on terms vastly different than those imagined by the Lydian
king. Indeed, Socrates's vision entails a thoroughgoing rejection of all
that Plato takes pains to remind us toward the end of the Symposium.
For just as Socrates has completed his paean to Eros, the party is in-
symposium. With a flute girl on his arm, and already terribly drunk,
and was rebuked. He now likens Socrates to Silenus and the satyrs,
the only difference being that the seductive philosopher beguiles with
his words rather than his flute. The comparison notwithstanding, it is
edy. In a sense, the two have come together at his feet. After tucking
in his hosts, he takes his leave, headed for the baths.
The ease with which Alcibiades is able to upset this special celebra-
of pleasure — altogether
is For the same way
instructive. Plato in that
was inclined to associate the sympotic lifestyle with the vulgar hedo-
nism of democratic Athens, he likewise associated symposia with poli-
tics.
44
Socrates —or at least the Socrates of Plato's dialogues — tended
scrupulously to avoid both. And thus Alcibiades's intervention is dou-
bly symbolic, representing not only the elusiveness and fragility of
Socrates's new form of happiness, but also what Plato regarded as the
fragility and shortcomings of democracy. When Alcibiades appeals to
the "jury" of guests in an attempt to warn them of the dangers of
Socratic philosophy, his action is meant to call to mind the very real
Judas —able to recognize that Socrates is nobler and better than any-
one "in the past or present," but unable to follow his call —he is also
an executioner, a symbol of the turbulent democratic man who appeals
to the basest parts of our soul. 46
the most just who ever lived. It is not surprising that he heaps scorn
on democratic institutions throughout his work. In book eight of the
Republic, Plato infamously describes democratic man as a slave to un-
cessfully seek the good for which it yearns. In the Republic, Plato goes
so far as to suggest that the one way this goal can be widely achieved
is coercively, in a state — a political state —where philosophers rule as
citizens alike. Prior to that time, Plato believed, only Socrates can be
said to have claimed the elusive prize to which his philosophy pointed
the way. He alone approached the goal of "becoming like a god," of
being truly happy. 48
Whether Socrates was in fact a corrupter of youth will likely remain
a contested question. What is far more certain is that his new view of
happiness entailed a radical rejection of all previous norms. In this
respect, if in no other, his accusers were right to fear him, and their
readiness to do so is instructive, highlighting the Socratic sleight of
hand that drew our attention at the beginning of this section. How,
we must ask again, can our desire for happiness be considered natural
40 Happiness
at the moment of its birth? Clearly, we all feel desires, but as both
Socrates and Plato hasten to emphasize, the vast majority of us follow
Eros, not back to the ethereal realm of goodness and beauty from
whence he purportedly came, but down to the earthly material world
where he is so often lost and confused amid the pleasures of the senses.
There — here — far away from the transcendent forms — happiness
proper can hardly be conceived. How can it be that we naturally de-
49
sire what we have never even known?
Plato himself would seem to admit as much, prescribing a radical
Anyone who has ever walked the gilded halls of the Vatican, or taken
a survey course in European art history, will know Raphael's filial fresco
The School of Athens, in which this devoted son of the Renaissance pays
homage to the movement's philosophical forefathers. A sumptuous
Darrin M. McMahon 41
the church — literally embedded in the walls —the work also captures
a received contrast between its two principal figures, Plato and Aristotle.
Framed in an archway that leads to the heavens, surrounded by the
greatest minds of the classical world, the two men dominate the work,
creating harmonious tension at its heart. Whereas the long-bearded
Plato gestures upward beyond the vast space of the enclosure, Aristotle
checks him horizontally, his hand steady in the plane of the earth.
The tome on his arm is exposed, also facing down, while Plato clutches
his great black book tightly to his side, accentuating the vertical
42 Happiness
opposites: one striving for wisdom in the world beyond; the other
searching to find it here in the world below.
There is a good deal of truth to this simple opposition, and it is of-
Darrin M. McMahon 43
spent nearly twenty years, from 367 to 347 bce. After serving as a
tutor in Macedonia to the young Alexander the Great, Aristotle re-
turned to Athens behind his pupil's armies and established his own
school, the Lyceum. Athen's democracy was drawing to a close, and
what was left of the city's fragile independence would soon be com-
pletely destroyed as its dominions were forcibly incorporated into
the Macedonian empire following Alexander's death in 323 bce. But
the dream of happiness born in the previous century was preserved
in Aristotle's school. Despite his different methods and approach,
he shared many of Socrates and Plato's larger aspirations. Serving to
further reinforce one of their central objectives — that of making
happiness the goal of all human activity— his work saddled this ulti-
writings, but he engages the subject most rigorously in what has come
to be known as the Nichomachean Ethics, named after Aristotle's son,
Nichomachus, who helped collate the text following his father's death.
flautist is to play the flute, and that the function of a sculptor is to sculpt.
Every way of life, every profession —what the Greeks called a "craft"
(techne) —would seem to have a distinct purpose. Can we say that there
we can, and he tries to identify this purpose by isolating our most dis-
Only human beings are capable of reason. Our unique human activity is
and the good life, between a human being who reasons well and one
who doesn't reason at all. In order to account for these differences,
Aristotle pushes his analogy with craftsmanship even further:
Let us return once again to the good we are looking for, and
consider just what it could be, since it is apparently one thing
in one action or craft, and another thing in another; for it is
that for the sake of which the other things are done; and in
What, then, is the highest good of the craft of life, the good for which
all others are simply means, the end that is complete in and of itself?
In Aristotle's view, this final end is happiness. Just as the good doc-
tor procures health through medicine, and the good general procures
victory through war, the good human being will procure happiness
through life. It is — the end we ought
our natural telos to reach if we
live well —and our highest attainment be won by to cultivating the
—
Darrin M. McMahon 45
faculty that sets us apart from all other creatures and acting accord-
ingly. To be a good human being, Aristotle affirms, is to live accord-
ing to our special human virtue, reason. And to be a good human being
is to be a happy human being. Happiness, Aristotle concludes, is an
"activity of the soul expressing virtue." 54
the world they inhabit participate in a larger order that gives them
meaning. Like Socrates and Plato, Aristotle assumes this to be the
case. And also like them, he is confident that human reason can give
us insight into our specific human function. Unlike them, he believes
we are looking for in our present inquiry" —but also that he turns to
popular conceptions of happiness to begin his investigation into what
this end might practically entail. Aristotle readily acknowledges that
most people form some idea of the nature of eudaimonia, even if they
don't believe it lies within their power to attain. And so he thinks that
to the fact that debate over the proper meaning of happiness was al-
ready taking shape in the classical world. Weighing heavily into that
debate himself, Aristotle is more than prepared to draw on much of
what he hears. As he summarizes these views in another work, the
Rhetoric:
really secure. 55
the features," as he says in the Ethics, "that people look for in happi-
ness" when they consider it in everyday terms. 56 In stark contrast to
the views of Socrates and Plato, this general understanding of happi-
ness is in keeping with the reflections dispensed by Solon to Croesus,
entailing health and security, pleasure and prosperity, honor and vir-
tue, good friends and good fortune to the end of one's days. Nor is this
Darrin M. McMahon 47
into account views that are "traditional, held by many," with others
entertained by a more reflective minority, "a few reputable men,"
Aristotle hopes to guard against theoretical abstruseness. 57 He also
reveals a bias that is rare in the philosopher: a predilection for the sta-
tus quo.
childless
—
happiness
58
if look utterly repulsive or are ill-born, solitary or
Similarly, Aristotle concurs with the widely held Greek
belief that happiness must be judged over a lifetime, for even "the
most prosperous person may fall into a terrible disaster in old age."
Granting virtue a central place in the attainment of happiness,
Aristotle nonetheless rejects the view, held by Socrates and Plato, that
virtue on its own is enough to secure our highest end. "Someone might
possess virtue," he counters, but still "suffer the worst evils and mis-
fortunes." To call this person happy would be "to defend a philoso-
59
pher's paradox."
tively little or no control (birth, beauty, luck) play some role in deter-
that "anyone who is not deformed [in his capacity] for virtue will be
able to achieve happiness through some sort of learning and attention."
Happiness, apparently, "will be widely shared." 60
But when we many (though not all) of
consider that Aristotle, like
his contemporaries, believed that women and those he deemed "natu-
would be able to realize their full potential, becoming what they are
the human activity that is most akin to the gods' will, more than any
other, have the character of happiness." In the end, the life of pure
contemplation is the most godlike life. It is "superior to the human
63
level."
happiness would seem rather bleak. Not only will most men and
women be denied true happiness from the outset —barred for reasons
of birth and circumstance —but even the relative elite who manage to
live in keeping with the ethical virtues will fall short. Theirs is but a
50 Happiness
the "happy few," but perhaps more telling is the unhappy majority that
this ideal creates. For the majority of humanity, Aristotle's happiness
is not only unattainable; it casts a shadow on the rest of life that must
remain, by definition, imperfect.
Darrin M. McMahon 51
' !
.
. 1
JBH|
H^H yjj J
mm Tjjf
fpfe
pass "the Garden" of Epicurus, the home where his adherents gath-
ered daily just minutes from the Dipylon Gate. Nor would the trav-
eler have missed the public lectures and discussions of Zeno, held at
the Stoa Poikile, a colonnade closer to the city center from which his
followers derived their name. Alongside Aristotle's own center of learn-
ing, the Lyceum, and that of his teacher, the Academy, these and
numerous other philosophic schools openly competed for adherents,
fact that by the close of the fourth century bce, their legacy was dis-
puted or, more precisely, regarded as incomplete. All three raised ex-
pectations they could not entirely fulfill. To many, their goal of earthly
happiness was enticing, but happiness for the godlike few was unaccept-
ably grim. Was there no other way of satisfying this nagging desire?
Zeno and Epicurus address precisely this question, aiming far more
human pain. "Empty is
explicitly than their predecessors to alleviate
Cicero observes similarly, "There is, I assure you, a medical art for the
" 67
soul. It is philosophy If the significant contribution of Socrates,
Plato, and Aristotle was the identification of happiness as the ultimate
state of human health, then the task of their successors was to help
diagnose and manage our ills. Both Epicurus and Zeno do this by man-
aging desire itself.
Darrin M. McMahon 53
ous Greek philosopher. But of this tremendous output, just a few frag-
ments remain. As with Zeno, the accounts of later followers —notably
the Roman Epicurean Lucretius — are central sources for understand-
the chastised heroes of the tragic stage, Zeno and Epicurus believe
that fate and fortune are ours to control. "I have anticipated you, For-
tune," Epicurus affirms, "and have barred your means of entry. Nei-
ther to you nor to any other circumstance shall we hand ourselves over
69
as captives." The Stoics, similarly, refuse to cede themselves to the
centurions of fate. Happiness is our own possession, they argue, even
when we have nothing else.
ing belief that they could retain power over their lives in increasingly
banished from the world for the following two thousand years — its
In this respect, Epicureans and Stoics remained true to, and even
accentuated, the Socratic stress on the immunity of happiness to luck.
But both schools also broke sharply with their classical predecessors.
pain and disturbance. Rather than fight against nature in the search
for happiness on high, we should accede to its power; nature will lead
us to our destination.
Epicurus's insistence on the centrality of pleasure —an insistence
with roots in other Greek traditions but at odds with the Socratic,
Platonic, and Aristotelian precedents — is based upon his radically
materialist understanding of physics. In Epicurus's view, the universe
tioning of the world or of those who live within it. It makes no sense,
consequently, to speak of Providence or Platonic forms, divine inten-
tion or an immaterial soul. Like everything else in the universe, human
beings are merely assemblages of matter, and consciousness is but
complex atomic motion. For Epicurus, it follows directly that sensa-
tions are not only the source of all experience but also the source of all
good and evil. What causes pleasure is good, and what causes pain is
rational, and that human beings are part of this ordered realm, Zeno
enjoins his followers to bring their individual natures into harmony
with nature as a whole.
The way to this end is virtue. By living virtuously, we order our lives
in keeping with the order of the world, and it is from this rational cor-
this respect, Zeno goes well beyond Aristotle to make virtue the sole
trast to the Epicureans, the Stoics reject even the importance of plea-
sure and pain. "The happy man is content with his present lot, no
72
matter what it is," Seneca maintains. Cicero goes so far as to argue
that the man of perfect virtue will be happy even under torture, even
on the rack. 73
The well-being of the happy man is completely imper-
vious to the crudest twists of fate.
On the surface, these two schools could not be more at odds, ap-
parently justifying our current use of the terms "stoic" and "epicurean"
to refer to, respectively, one who is "indifferent to pleasure or pain,"
and one who is "devoted to sensual pleasure." 74 Such contemporary
definitions are misleading, for they hide the essential similarities of
the schools. When we look beyond the surface, we begin to take note
of a crucial convergence.
Most important, both Epicureanism and Stoicism are ascetic doc-
and other spurious notions that exist only in our minds. It is not sur-
prising that thinkers in the eighteenth century would later seize on this
relevant to the health of the body or the peace of the mind, the final
goals of a happy life. The singular task of the Epicurean acolyte is to
learn how to winnow and sort, separating the necessary desires from
those that will lead us astray. Self-knowledge, like knowledge of the
world, enables us to free ourselves from the sources of pain.
Although this is a complicated process, the essential point is that
Epicurus believes our necessary desires to be extremely limited: The
requirements for happiness are few. "The voice of the flesh cries,
'Keep me from hunger, thirst, and cold!'" Epicurus writes. "The man
who has these sureties and who expects he always will would rival even
Zeus for happiness." 76 Food and drink—frugal food and drink, for "plain
dishes offer the same pleasure as a luxurious table" — shelter, and a
modicum of security should be enough to satisfy anyone whose desires
Darrin M. McMahon 57
are properly in order. By contrast, "He who is not satisfied with a little,
77
is satisfied with nothing." Here and elsewhere, Epicurus sounds sur-
prisingly Stoic, even observing in one instance that "all physical pain is
negligible: that which is intense lasts but a brief time, while chronic
physical discomfort has no great intensity." 78 It is not without reason
that Seneca later concluded the "teachings of Epicurus are upright and
holy and, if you consider them closely, austere." His "pleasure" was, in
79
truth, "sober" and "abstemious," wholly in keeping with virtue.
own essay on happiness, "De Vita Beata," to defending his wealth and
luxurious lifestyle. But his ruminations on Epicurus's austerity and the
suggestion of similarity with the tradition of Zeno are worth consider-
ing, for they cut to the heart of what was originally most innovative
about both schools of belief. Epicurus, no less than his Stoic counter-
part, taught that happiness is a function of the ratio of satisfied de-
of two things: either expand our means to attain our desires or reduce
our desires to suit our means. "That which is happy," Epictetus af-
firms, "must possess in full all that it wants, must resemble a person
who has achieved his fill —neither hunger nor thirst can come near
it."
81
And as he and Epicurus emphasize, the surest way to protect
oneself from hunger is to stifle all cravings, to give up one's appetite.
It is this effort — the attempt
above all to make happiness com-
pletely independent of external goods — that lends insight into why
these two philosophies were conceived, and subsequently flourished,
in complex social and political environments in which little beyond
58 Happiness
Epicureans and Stoics offered their medicine to any who would take
it. Whereas Plato and Aristotle restricted happiness to the privileged
few, Epicurus and Zeno proposed to make gods of many, the former
accepting women and slaves into his garden, and the latter preaching
the natural kinship of all humankind. As either matter in motion or
emanations of logos, all were potential candidates for the salvation of
happiness, and many presented themselves as aspirants. By the time
of Jesus, there were Epicurean communities throughout the Mediter-
ranean world, and 450 years after Epicurus's death, the Garden was
still functioning. Stoicism, too, spread to become virtually a Roman
state religion, enlisting peasants and artisans, politicians like Cicero
and Seneca, emperors like Marcus Aurelius, and slaves like Epictetus.
With reason are Epicurus and Zeno regarded as founders of two of the
greatest schools of Athens, surpassed only by Plato and Aristotle.
Sometime in the late fifth century bce, Prodicus wrote a tale. A con-
temporary of Socrates, possibly his early teacher and assuredly his later
jects for praise. Ranging from his Sophism to his rivalry with Socrates,
the list might possibly bear another. For it is perhaps not altogether
fanciful to suppose that the barbed allusion in the Symposium extends
beyond Prodicus's person and the subject of his praise to The Choke of
Hercules, a work whose defining episode involved an opposition that
doubt about which path to take in life. Make me your friend; follow
me, and I will lead you along the pleasantest and easiest road. You shall
taste all the sweets of life; and hardship you shall never know." When
asked her name, she replies, "my friends call me Happiness \eudai-
monia], but among those who hate me, I am nicknamed vice" (kakta)^
After hearing her plea, Hercules turns away, choosing the more diffi-
cult road, the well-worn tragic path that leads to unavoidable suffer-
ing and pain. This, truly, is a hero's task. Virtue may well be Hercules's
reward, but in keeping with the ancient wisdom of the tragic tradi-
tion, this hero will not be happy. He cannot make himself so.
happiness a whore. And fewer still have believed that in pursuing it,
group of pilgrims arrives at the temple of Saturn and engages with its
wise old keeper about the meaning of a picture on the wall. The vast
trepid travelers who have chosen to enjoy her reign. The contrast with
Prodicus's work could not be more striking. Here, happiness is virtue.
dence between image and word, the work remained popular well into
the eighteenth century. 87
The triumph and endurance of this anonymous text symbolizes per-
fectly the triumph and endurance of a classical ideal. By the time of its
authorship, and for many centuries thereafter, men and women chose
the way to happiness as a matter of course. That they were prepared to
do so — to set out in the conviction that they might reach this end
largely of their own volition — is one of the highest achievements of
Darrin M. McMahon 63
The title page to a 1523 edition of the works of Strabo, the first-
the classical world. The fork in the road had been abolished. The task
of the hero, the man of virtue, was no longer to turn aside, conceding
tragically like Croesus that "no one who lives is happy." The task was
rather to carry on, becoming godlike, blessed and happy of one's own
accord. Happiness was not in conflict with virtue. Happiness was virtue's
reward.
This departure, this change in direction, is profound. But though
its importance is difficult to overstate, it should be qualified, for few
figures in the ancient world ever discounted entirely the daimon in
upon those who not only suffer but suffer for their failure to be happy.
It is doubtful whether the ancients ever cultivated this form of guilt,
although as early Christian missionaries would discover in the first
centuries after the death of Jesus, guilt in its more general forms was
a temptation to which the ancient world was by no means immune.
We will return to this story. What should be stressed here is that in
the space of roughly two hundred years —from the middle of the fifth
century to the middle of the third century bce —ancient Greek think-
ers elevated the idea of human happiness to a privileged place in the
hierarchy of ends. Picked up in turn by their Roman successors, it
would remain there, virtually unchallenged in the West, until the time
of Christ. To be sure, Greeks and Romans alike disputed the means
to happiness. But as we have seen, the most powerful currents in an-
cient thought — the four great schools of Athens —shared fundamen-
tal assumptions. All could agree that happiness was an objective rather
—
Darrin M. McMahon 65
might accompany it, surely, but on the whole, sensual enjoyment was
viewed even by Epicurus with a certain skepticism and even outright
disdain. The product of perpetual craft, happiness required discipline
and hard work, conducted always under the hand of reason. For the
ancients, the achievement of happiness was an immensely difficult
tion of the limits of our own assumptions. And yet it is fair to ask whether
this lack of lucidity is merely a result of the remove of time. Did not the
ancients themselves struggle to see their highest end? It is revealing in
this connection that for all their emphasis on the happiness of mortals,
the ancients resorted time and again to analogies with the divine, liken-
ing the happy state to the transcendent. "You shall live as a god among
men," Epicurus promises, ensuring that the happy man "is not like a
mortal being." 88
A life of happiness for Aristotle, as for Socrates and Plato
before him, was "a god-like life," "superior to the human level," and as
such, difficult for mere mortals to conceive, let alone attain. Ever on the
horizon, just beyond the sight line, blurry and indistinct, happiness con-
tinued to entice. But in the rarefied air of the classical schools, many
lost sight or lost their way, while many others were never admitted at
all. Left to wander on life's devious paths beyond the confines of these
inner sancta, they searched for happiness where they could, until it was
found —refound— in the face of God.
PERPETUAL FELICITY
68 Happiness
the theater, placed her hand directly on him and explained, "I too wish
3
to partake a little in your felicity {felicitas)" Like animal magnetism,
Sylla's felicitas — his sexuality, good fortune, and prowess in battle
with life. Despite what to modern eyes may seem its somewhat shock-
ing manner of presentation, the fascinums' associations with happi-
but also rich in the things of this earth. That same precedent
prompted Aristotle to include a number of these attributes —wealth,
security, ample offspring, luck — in his list of "the features that people
look for in happiness" when they considered it in everyday terms. Even
the comparatively otherworldly Plato understood the powerful bonds
that connected eros to eudaimonia, and in many other religious and
philosophical traditions such associations were common.
Still, the Roman concept of felicitas is noteworthy for its particularly
candid expression, its frank avowal that worldly pleasures and powers
were signs of the beneficence of the gods. In the late Republic and
early Empire — as Rome attained the commanding heights of its pros-
perity and dominion — this expression grew even bolder still: Felicitas
Darrin M. McMahon 69
Felicity united public power and private prosperity under the aegis of
world —we should not suppose that their comfort went unchallenged
or was ever entirely undisturbed. Well before the Romans conquered
Greece in the second century bce, they had looked upon their classi-
cal brethren with high regard, absorbing the teachings of the Platonic,
Aristotelian, Epicurean, and Stoic schools. Cultivated by Roman aco-
lytes and innovative successors such as Cicero, Seneca, and Lucretius,
these teachings ensured that the higher happiness of the Greeks en-
dured to raise doubts about the felicity of pleasure and the efficacy of
daily enjoyments to take us to our end. The same impulse that had
led Socrates to suspect that true happiness lay beyond the vulgar he-
donism of the symposium persisted, prompting Romans, too, to ques-
tion whether all they had in Rome was enough to give them what they
desired.
"The more the money grows the more the greed / Grows too; also
longing for simpler times, were very much of the mood. Amid unprec-
edented material splendor, the fall of the Republic, and the civil wars
Darrin M. McMahon 71
that followed the death of Caesar in 44 bce, Horace looked back from
his own Augustan age to what he called "the virtues of plain living,"
the simple traits that he believed had once made Romans strong. 8
Even now they might be cultivated away from the metropolis and its
decadent delights:
and cultivate his garden with quiet dignity and honor. He draws
simple, honest pleasures from simple, honest things: close friendship
and warm conversation, wholesome labor and sweat, the soothing
delights of nature, a drop of wine. Never taking his life for granted,
Carpe diem. Seize the day. Press the juice from the grapes of life.
schools. But they also reflect the concern that the basic values of the
Roman character were being lost. Thus does Horace hark back again
and again to the oasis of his Sabine farm on the outskirts of the city,
Here, the happy man is in his element. He feels good in his skin. His
needs are few, his nobility complete. Forming nature as he is formed
by it, he exudes innocence, well-being, and humble gravitas.
Virgil is even less restrained, indulging in the Georgia and other works
pastoral fancies of rural retirement and boundless fertility:
retreats to the earthly city around them, they saw much to regret.
"As a result of envious greed few people can say that they've had a
happy life," Horace observes. 19 Gluttony, licentiousness, concupi-
scence, and envy. "So we can rarely find a man who says he
it is that
has lived a happy life and who, when his time is up, contentedly leaves
20
the world like a guest who has had his fill." The image of an age
ruled by passions without restraint is the inverse of the idyll of bu-
colic perfection. If the countryside was an oasis, the city was depraved.
This, at any rate, was the image that many would take away: from
classical republicans and their imitators down through the eighteenth
century, to Christian contemporaries and chroniclers of pagan per-
versions. Together they read in Roman records of moral decay a self-
indictment of the city of man.
But if Romans themselves recognized their divergence from a
happy via media, it was Christian commentators who did the most to
decry the pagan departure from the true road to happiness. Whereas
Horace confronted his age with an image of simple country joy and a
reminder of what real Roman fe/icitas could be, Christians savaged the
true, and Felicity is a goddess, why is it not established that she alone
should be worshipped, since she could confer all blessings and, in
this economical fashion, bring a man to happiness? . . . Does anyone
desire anything for any other reason than to secure happiness?" 21
The rhetorical flourish is instructive: As we shall see, Christian
polemicists conceded the end; they disputed only the means. In the
Romans' refusal to abandon their false gods, they saw a sign not just
of their willful blindness but of the patent insufficiency of Felicitas
to deliver what they, like all men, truly desired. "How can a man es-
cape unhappiness, if he worships Felicity as divine and deserts God,
the giver of felicity?" Augustine insisted. "Could a man escape star-
bread from someone who had it to give?" 22 False bread was what the
pagans had to offer, bread that, notwithstanding the promise of a
proud Pompeian penis, would never rise and fill with life but could
only weigh down with the force of death, leaving the spirit to starve.
Christianity alone could satisfy real human hunger in the knowledge
that man did not live simply by bread. For those who sought to re-
place fleeting fe/mtas temporum with a perpetual felicity for all time,
the body of Christ was the one true manna of those who would live
like gods.
In the springtime of the year 203, a young North African woman was
taken into custody by Roman soldiers in the city of Carthage, in what
is now contemporary Tunisia. Twenty-two, of good family, well edu-
cated, married, and nursing a child, Vibia Perpetua was charged with
violating a decree issued the previous year by the Roman emperor
Septimus Severus outlawing conversion to Christianity. Still only a
day feast of Severus's son, Geta, the group was fed to wild animals,
mauled, and slain by the sword before jeering spectators in a small
Carthage arena. In this way did their flesh become food for pagan plea-
sure at the very moment that they themselves were taken into the
mystical body of Christ. 23
The persecution of Christians, as of Jews, was by no means an un-
precedented phenomenon in the Roman Empire of the early third cen-
and among the first to strike with particular force in Roman North
Africa, where budding Christian communities had developed largely in
24
peace. In this respect, the festivities of Carthage set something of an
ominous precedent, initiating a wave of orchestrated violence that
joiced at this that they had obtained a share in the Lord's suffering." 25
And when they were persecuted and reviled, they were manifestly
glad. Embracing their ordeal with an eagerness that seemed to delight
in pain, they greeted death with open arms. By all accounts, the on-
looking crowd was uncomprehending. They did not know it, but their
response was fitting. For what these men and women were witness-
ing in the blood and dust of an African spring was nothing less than a
radical new vision of human happiness.
Steeped as it is in the primary narrative of suffering, the Christian
religion may fail to call happiness immediately to mind. It is, after all,
rowful, yet always rejoicing," the apostle Paul writes to his brethren
in Corinth sometime in the early 50s ce. 27 In effect, this was the cen-
tral paradox of the early Christian experience: The "good news" of
Christ's message was precisely his promise of redemption through suf-
Darrin M. McMahon 77
ent from anything ever known. We need only think of Christ's fre-
particularly in the Sermon on the Mount and the Sermon on the Plain
in Matthew and Luke. Set down, many scholars argue, in roughly the
years 80-90 ce, each sermon begins with a series of "beatitudes" or bless-
ings, a venerable form so named because of the Vulgate translation of
the Greek term with which they begin. Beati in Latin, makarios in Greek,
the terms are often rendered in English as "blessed," although "happy"
would serve equally well, as indeed it does in translations such as the
French, where "heureux" from the Old French heur is used in the canon.
More revealing, though, is the original Greek term itself, a word that, as
28
gradually acquired a slightly more exalted sense. The classically edu-
cated reader of the first century, in any case, would not have failed to
associate the word with the tradition of Greek philosophy.
Even more immediately pertinent, however, is the fact that makarios
was also the word chosen by Hellenized Jews in the second century
bce when they looked for an appropriate term to replace the classical
asher is the term used in the so-called Ashrel, the Hebrew beatitudes
that one finds scattered throughout the various books of the Jewish
Bible.* "Happy are those who do not follow the advice of the wicked,"
we read, "or take the path that sinners tread . . . but their delight is in
the law of the Lord" (Psalms 1:1-2). Or "Happy are those whose way
*"Asher" (Happy) is also the name of the founder of one of the twelve tribes of
Israel, the son of Jacob and the maid Zilpah, upon whose birth his mother declares,
"Happy am I!" (Genesis 30:12-13). It is probably further relevant in this connec-
tion that Asherah was a Canaanite goddess of fertility.
78 Happiness
is blameless, who walk in the law of the Lord" (Psalms 1 19: 1). In these
Ugaritic and Arabic, >r), meaning "to go," "to go straight," or "to ad-
asher and its many inflected forms gradually took on meanings close in
when the psalmist writes, "My steps have held fast to your path; my
feet have not slipped" (Psalms 17:5), thus rendering the beatitude
For all save the crippled and lame, however, there is probably noth-
ing inherently happy about putting one foot in front of the other. So
why this close connection? Any answer can only be speculative, but some
have suggested that the link with the verb sr points to an act in which
believers went in search of happiness. "It was probably the pilgrimage
to the temple," one scholar writes. Quite literally, "this act makes be-
31
lievers 'happy.'" Whether or not one is willing in this way to trace the
steps of the happy directly to the feet of the Western Wall, it is cer-
tainly the case that the nomadic tribes of Israel held movement in par-
the desert from the straight path of God. And not long after setting
Darrin M. McMahon 79
foot in Canaan, they commit "evil in the sight of the Lord," resorting
son does the Seder of Passover, the Jewish feast held in remembrance
of the Exodus from Egypt, conclude to this day with the saying "Next
year in Jerusalem." Even for those already there, deliverance lies in
the future, in another place, bidding us to set our course in its direc-
Jerusalem would bring with it the total salvation and deliverance pre-
saged in Exodus. But in the meantime, the children of Israel must seek
to appreciate the journey, observing God's law with fidelity, while
rejoicing in the goodness of his creation:
Happy is everyone who fears the Lord, who walks in his ways.
You shall eat the fruit of the labor of your hands; you shall be
happy, and it shall go well with you.
Your wife will be like a fruitful vine within your house; your
children will be like olive shoots around your table.
Thus shall the man be blessed who fears the Lord.
The Lord bless you from Zion. May you see the prosperity of
Jerusalem all the days of your life.
held aloft what the world only grudgingly offered up. A verdant oasis
flowing with milk and honey and a plentiful supply of rain were fitting
rewards for a parched people who had long wandered in the desert.
Like the early Greeks and virtually all traditional cultures, the peoples
of ancient Israel conceived of happiness in some measure in material
terms. To be happy or blessed was not only to know God's favor, but
also to safely enjoy the things that an uncertain world was so quick to
deny: prosperity, family, fertility, peace, security, longevity, a good
name. In this respect the descriptive epithet of the Hebrew beati-
tudes was close in meaning to the Greek makarios and could even stand
comparison with the Romans' more earthly felicitas.
Yet there were also crucial differences, and in many respects these
are the more important. The Jewish stress on deliverance — the col-
to "step" forward on the path of God's law was crucial. But it was God's
shepherding grace that guided them forward and his decisive inter-
Rather than simply return, that is, to some previously known state,
time, its importance loomed ever larger. Already in the general pe-
riod in which Isaiah was writing —probably some two centuries before
the Babylonian captivity of the sixth century bce, when the defeated
Jewish people were scattered from the promised land — prophetic
voices began to call for, and to predict, the coming of a new leader,
a new savior, a Messiah to point the way back to the kingdom of God.
In the centuries that followed, other voices joined those of Isaiah and
Jeremiah, Ezekiel and Zechariah, Joel and Daniel, hoping to usher
in not only the end of the Jewish journey but the end of history it-
self. For those who heeded such apocalyptic predictions, the culmi-
nation of arrival would be the culmination of time, the advent not
only of milk and honey but of the free-flowing eternal paradise in
which suffering would be abolished forever. Here is one such voice
from the first century ce:
It was into this context of prolonged and lavish expectation that Jesus
of Nazareth stepped. And though this was only one context of many, its
uttered the words that are recorded, long after the fact, in John 14:6, "I
am the way," we can be fairly certain that he was greeted by many of his
earliest disciples as if he had. Christ (Christus), "the anointed one,"
seemed to these men and women to be the long-awaited savior who
would lead in a direction whose path was familiar but whose destina-
tion was uncharted. In doing so, he revealed a new truth, a new king-
dom, and not least, a new happiness. In form, content, and many of its
words, the beatific promise was recognizable. But it was also unmistak-
ably new. Here are the beatitudes as recorded in Matthew:
Happy are the pure in heart, for they will see God.
Happy are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of
God.
Happy are those who are persecuted for righteousness's sake,
Happy/Blessed are you who are poor, for yours is the kingdom
of God.
Happy are you who are hungry now, for you will be filled.
Happy are you who weep now, for you will laugh.
Happy are you when people hate you, and when they exclude
you, revile you, and defame you on account of the Son of
Man.
—
Darrin M. McMahon 83
Rejoice in that day and leap for joy, for surely your reward is
Access to heaven and dominion over the earth, justice, mercy, the di-
belly — this was a lavish promise by any measure, yet one partially rec-
ognizable to allwho had searched for the promised land on the horizon
of the holy. Those who pursued justice and the way of the Lord would
be given their due, granted mercy and intimacy in the family of God,
allowed to share in the rich legacy of his kingdom. The hungry would
be filled, the mournful would laugh, their gifts would be great.
This much — the end—was partly familiar to readers of Jewish scrip-
ture. But what were the followers of Jesus to make of the means, the
steps that he traced for all who would go happily in the way that led
through him? Whereas earlier sages, both Israelite and Greek, had
counseled the avoidance of suffering as a condition of happiness
urging their followers to flee, scorn, or simply bear it like Job — Christ
recommends suffering's active embrace. The emphasis is on the prom-
ise of future reward: Those who endure pain now will be granted plea-
want to know Christ and the power of his resurrection and the shar-
ing of his sufferings by becoming like him in his death," yearns the
his creation in the Jewish tradition. This is the central message of the
Book of Ecclesiastes, composed probably in the third century bce.
Searching for satisfaction in knowledge, pleasure, labor, and toil, the
author of the text concludes that all human striving is pointless, de-
"So I hated life," the author writes initially, "because what is done
under the sun was grievous to me; for all is vanity and a chasing after
wind" (Eccl. 2:17). Crucially, however, this realization leads to a higher
a sense of past and future into their minds, yet they cannot
find out what God has done from the beginning to the end.
Moreover, it is God's gift that they all should eat and drink
and take pleasure in all their toil.
God alone is eternal. And so we must fear him and keep his command-
ments, "for that is the whole duty of everyone" (Eccl. 12:13). But this
does not preclude savoring the wholesome pleasures of existence:
Go, eat your bread with enjoyment, and drink your wine with
a merry heart; for God has long ago approved what you do.
Let your garments always be white; do not let oil be lacking
on your head.
Enjoy life with the wife whom you love, all the days of your
vain life that are given you under sun, because that is your
portion in life. . . . (Eccl. 9:7-9)
Darrin M. McMahon 85
blessed, are not the men and women who in the common view are
"sad" actually happy, and those who are treated as "happy" actually
It is in large part for this reason that the account of Perpetua and
86 Happiness
which the forces of the Lord will do battle with those of the Beast,
Jesus will descend to rule on earth for one thousand years (the mil-
lennium) before defeating Satan in a final confrontation. At that
stage, time will come to an end, heaven will reign on earth, and the
elect will be gathered with God in the New Jerusalem, where Eden's
tree of life will again bear fruit.
daily in the baptismal font, reviving them with his living flesh in holy
communion, and breathing new life into their spirits with his own. In
lows set out willingly on their road to death. For simply by paying token
obeisance to the emperor, it bears emphasizing —by denying their
identities as Christians —any one of these men and women could have
spared themselves their horrible fate. 36 Yet to do so was unthinkable
precisely because they viewed the call to martyrdom as a direct solici-
tation from God, a precious invitation from the ever present Christ to
participate directly in his passion, to suffer and die, as did he. This
was what Paul had described as the greatest privilege. Neither pun-
ishment nor condemnation, the call to martyrdom was, on the con-
trary, the ultimate mark of divine favor. In the communities of early
Christianity, there was no clearer sign that the Holy Spirit had settled
on one in the fullness of grace.
But what an immense burden this was to bear. Could one support
the weight of the divine presence? Could one shoulder the cross? If
martyrdom was a privilege, it was also a trial, the ultimate test of one's
The hands that would hold her grasped firmly. "While we were still
under arrest," Perpetua observes in the very first line of the account
written in her own voice, "my father out of love for me was trying to
persuade me and shake my resolution." 37 So, too, is she shaken by the
visits of her mother, brother, and child. "I was in pain because I saw
them suffering out of pity for me. These were the trials I had to en-
Darrin M. McMahon 89
dure for many days." 38 Consumed by worry for her infant, whom she is
still nursing, Perpetua obtains permission to have the child stay with
her in prison while she awaits sentencing. But it is clear that this can
God? Was her withdrawal from her family tinged with resentment and
even anger at their failure to understand her, at their refusal to ac-
tention from the more salient issue: Perpetua's own conviction that
what moved her was the will of God. For it was ultimately this deep
and abiding sense that fed her courage, that allowed her to break with
what, for a young Roman woman, would have been the immensely
powerful hold of the paterfamilias. When, at the final sentencing of
90 Happiness
the prisoners, her father tries to dissuade her one last time, begging,
"Have pity on your father's grey head; have pity on your infant son.
Offer the sacrifice for the welfare of the emperors," Perpetua stands
firm, answering simply, "I will not." And when asked by the Roman
official if she is indeed a Christian, she is unflinching: "Yes, I am." In
that simple affirmation, uttered in the full knowledge of its final con-
sequences, Perpetua pulls free. Though her protesting father is beaten
by the presiding guards, moving her to pity, she is not shaken as be-
fore, but departs with the other prisoners "in high spirits," joyfully (et
hilares descendimus) . When later she learns that her child will not join
her again, having been successfully weaned, she accepts this calmly as
God's will. "So I was relieved of any anxiety for my child and of any
40
discomfort in my breasts." It is difficult to imagine a clearer, more
poignant, illustration of Christ's awesome injunction in Matthew
10:37: that whoever loves father or mother, daughter or son "more than
me is not worthy of me"; and that "whoever loses his life for my sake
41
will find it" (10:39).
But just what exactly did she and her companions hope to find?
any they would have known. Broadly speaking, egalitarian and, broadly
speaking, communal, the early charismatic sects of Mediterranean
Christendom demanded renunciation — of money, of social ties, of
one's past — in return for deep solidarity and intimate support. 42 Un-
doubtedly, the apostle Paul's claim that in the community of Christ
there "was neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free, male nor female"
(Galatians 3:28) was always more complicated in practice than in
theory. But in the several generations following Jesus's death, it was a
powerful ideal nonetheless. The fact that the well-bred Perpetua
could address her newfound companions —including the former slaves
Darrin M. McMahon 91
privileged; surely you might ask for a vision to discover whether you
are condemned or freed." The prisoner asks for nothing less than a
vision from God, and Perpetua is confident that she can provide it.
"Faithfully I promised that I would, for I knew that I could speak with
the Lord, whose great blessings I had come to experience." 43 In di-
rect dialogue with the divine, Perpetua is singled out by the Holy
Spirit, and so is singled out within the community of which she formed
a part. For a young Roman woman, raised in traditions of deference to
men, this opportunity for leadership may well have proved attractive,
The diary records four of Perpetua's visions, and a fifth by her com-
panion Saturus. Not surprisingly, all negotiate in one way or another
the way to the heavens." To the sides are attached weapons of various
sorts: "There were swords, spears, hooks, daggers, and spikes; so that
if anyone tried to climb up carelessly or without paying attention, he
would be mangled and his flesh would adhere to the weapons." And at
the foot of the ladder "lay a dragon of enormous size, [who] would
attack those who tried to climb up and try to terrify them from doing
so." With the help of Saturus and "in the name of Jesus Christ,"
Perpetua treds on the dragon's head and is make
able to the ascent. 44
Replete with images drawn, most likely, from scriptural passages
with which she was familiar — the reference to Jacob's ladder in Gene-
sis 28:12, for example, or to the dragon described in Revelations 12
this lush vision plays out Perpetua's spiritual struggle, enacting and
resolving the anxiety of her approaching ordeal, her quest to go up to
God. In a later vision, this becomes even clearer, with Perpetua dream-
ing intriguingly that she is a man, naked and rubbed in oil, engaged
in combat with a gladiator of marvelous size. After defeating the
92 Happiness
opponent in the arena, she awakes to realize "that it was not with wild
animals that I would fight but with the Devil," and that ultimately
she would prevail. "I knew I would win the victory." 45
might not be at hand, but in the meantime, God would gather his fold
in the fields of heaven. At the end of her ascent up the ladder, Per-
petua envisions a resplendent resting place for those able to endure
the climb:
his vision of how he and Perpetua are "carried towards the east by
four angels." "Free of the world," they see "an intense light" and know
that this is what the "Lord promised us." A "great open space" opens
up before them, a garden "with rose bushes and all manner of flowers"
and trees as tall as cypresses, "their leaves constantly falling." Fellow
martyrs greet them; others play in peace and serenity, shepherded
by the Lord:
Darrin M. McMahon 93
When Saturus awakes from his vision, he, too, can taste his future.
"And then," he writes, "I woke up happy." 48
Formed from the fertile stock of late Jewish reflection on the after-
life, pagan imaginings of the pastoral bliss of Elysium, and the rich
imagery of Gentile scripture, these remarkable visions reveal the ex-
tent to which the Christian heaven was assuming vivid shape. Even
more basically, they reveal the extent to which the promise of happi-
ness lay at the heart of the early Christian message. Deogratias, utquo-
modo in came hi/arisfui, hilarior sim et hie modo, Perpetua observes in
Saturus's vision of eternal life. Literally, "Thanks be to God that I am
now morejoyful [my emphasis] than I was in the flesh." Was it not pre-
cisely this prospect —the hope of achieving an end to suffering through
convictions. "If with merely human hopes I fought with wild animals
for life eternal. "Now is your time of grief," Christ tells his disciples in
the Gospel of John, "but I will see you again and you will rejoice, and
no one will take away your joy" (16:22).
This same promise is repeated throughout the New Testament,
and its effect is powerful. For to an even greater extent than with the
promised kingdom of the children of Israel, the happiness outlined in
the beatific vision was at once specific in its suggestion of rich rewards
and extremely, luxuriantly vague. Here the imagination could be set
total fulfillment that would justify one's earthly pains. The ecstatic
consummation of divine love, the release, the rapture, the bliss — the
happiness of the newly promised arrival would be entire, eternal, end-
less, and complete. For now it could only be imagined. "What no eye
has seen, nor ear heard, nor the human heart conceived," Paul writes
in 1 Corinthians, is "what God has prepared for those who love him."
Now we see this only imperfectly, "through a glass, darkly, but then
face to face." 49 Even the perpetual felicity imagined by Perpetua and
Felicitas would be as nothing compared to the real thing.
But this was not only, to borrow a later phrase from Augustine, a
"happiness of hope," a compelling promise of future joy, but also an
injunction to rejoice now in the expectation of that promise's fulfill-
your reward in heaven " (Matthew 5:12). It is telling that this com-
mandment follows immediately upon the last of the beatitudes in
Matthew: "Happy are you when people revile you and persecute you
50
and utter all kinds of evils against you falsely on my account" (5:1 1).
The ecstasy of the imagined reward was commensurate with the in-
The beatific vision, then, entailed a decisive turn away from the main
paths of both classical and Jewish experience, as well as a frank rejec-
—
Darrin M. McMahon 95
tion of the carpe diem hedonism of late Roman felkitas. Whereas in the
happy man could be happy even on the rack, happy in spite of suffering.
Christianity took this a step further, proposing that happiness was not
just impervious to pain, but its direct outcome and consequence. The
rack, the instrument of torture —the cross —becomes the site and sym-
bol of a more general process of conversion, a place of spiritual alchemy
where the base metal of human pain is converted into the gold of divine
rapture. With good reason is Christ's suffering and death termed the
"passion." His infinite capacity to experience anguish is directly pro-
to this you have been called," Peter observes to the righteous, "be-
cause Christ also suffered for you, leaving you an example, so that you
should follow in his steps" (1 Peter 2:21). In doing so, Perpetua and
her companions demonstrated their total confidence that Christ had
shown the way, and their complete faith in the prize that would com-
plete their journey.
And so happiness — or, in the Latin, felicitas —was an intimate, if
end of the text that, being eight months pregnant, Felicitas worried
that she would be prevented from joining her companions in the arena,
for Roman law forbade the execution of expectant mothers. Sharing
her fears, her "comrades in martyrdom" prayed for an early birth,
—
96 Happiness
hurrying life so that Felicitas herself might die. Evidently, their prayers
were answered. Before their encounter in the ring, Felicitas delivered
a baby girl, freeing herself to set out with her friends on what they
described as "the road to hope." Both literally and figuratively, felic-
ity walked with them, as these beatissimi martyres, these "most happy
51
martyrs," walked to their final end.
Some two centuries later, on the very day of the year that Perpetua
and Felicitas had walked to their end, a congregation gathered in the
had done since shortly after their death. Great feasts they held there
{agape), joyous festivities flowing with food and wine, ardor and exu-
berance of such earthly intensity that in 397 the Council of Carthage
sought to curtail them. The pilgrims continued to come, regardless,
taking part in a wider cult of martyrs then exploding across the dying
Roman Empire. Drawn by talk of miracles and healings performed at
the first three decades of the fifth century was Aurelius Augustinus
Saint Augustine. A gifted orator, he spoke with particular rapture on
these days of remembrance. And so, after reading with tenderness
from the passio of Perpetua and Felicitas, he reminded his flock of why
sertion that through their names, Perpetua and Felicitas bore witness
the lions. The late Roman world of Saint Augustine was a place in
which ideas and creeds competed openly for takers like shouted wares
in a marketplace bazaar.
Augustine entered this marketplace with no clear idea of what goods
he might find. His mother, Monica, was a Christian, and perhaps also
a Donatist, a member of an intensely devout, and ultimately schis-
matic, sect that flourished in North Africa in the late fourth century.
98 Happiness
Carthage. He died while his son was still a young man, leaving Augus-
tine to seek spiritual guidance where he could. For already Augustine
had adopted the prejudice of educated pagans, looking down on the
faith of his mother as the fodder of the simpleminded.
Viewed from without, Augustine's intellectual journey in the fol-
lowing years holds to a straight line, leading from his student days to
his time as a teacher in Carthage to his march on Rome as an ambi-
tious young man to his seizure of the prestigious professorship of
meaning and of what his classical education led him to believe was his
ultimate end. From the moment he read Cicero's encomium to wis-
dom, the now lost Hortensius, in his teens, he made the search for
higher happiness his final goal. And he believed, with great faith, that
philosophy was the staff that would guide him there. 54
Augustine covered more ground than most. In fact, his early life is
stand the twists and turns of the pursuit of happiness — its psychologi-
cal highways and emotional cul-de-sacs — it was in large part because
he had traveled down so many of those roads himself.
Darrin M. McMahon 99
money for wine by wishing a good day to passersby, Augustine fed his
pride by "telling lies" in praise of the emperor's worth. All his learn-
ing had proved futile — it was "no source of happiness to me." He wan-
56
dered in circles. His misery was complete.
100 Happiness
Augustine broke free from this labyrinth of despair with his dra-
matic conversion to Christianity in 386. In the Confessions, he goes over
in painstaking detail the ground that led him to the garden in Milan
where he took his final step. As a consequence, that journey has re-
mained a subject of intense scrutiny ever since. But what is most ap-
parent is how Augustine's conversion responded to the failure of his
classical quest. In the future bishop of Hippo's monumental interpre-
tation, Christianity became not only "the way" to happiness but also
the way to account for the futility of all other earthly pursuits.
Augustine developed this interpretation slowly, over the course of
testimony to this fact in his first completed work, the revealingly en-
57
titled Debeatavtta, The Happy (or Blessed) Life. Written while he
awaited his formal reception into the church in the rite of baptism,
the work recounts a series of discussions with his mother and a small
group of friends who have joined him at a country house outside of
Milan for his birthday. In form, the work is a classical dialogue, likely
ing in stages and through dialectical argument toward the final goal of
ascertaining the meaning of a happy life. "Neither dependent upon
fate nor subject to any mishap," happiness, the group learns, in good
classical fashion, must "always endure" and so cannot be "snatched
away through any severe misfortune." Intimately linked to the culti-
ness" or plenitude flowing in such a way that the one who experiences
it lacks nothing, knows no want. Those who are happy are "not in
need" but are filled with the "supreme measure" of wisdom. To be
happy is thus to be suffused with truth, to "have God within the soul,"
to "enjoy God." 58
In the final pages of the dialogue, Augustine illustrates this descrip-
tion with two metaphors that reveal his enormous debt to Plato, and
to the latter's third-century interpreters, Porphyry and Plotinus. Lik-
Darrin M. McMahon 101
Destined to continue seeking until the end of our days, we may draw
closer to God, see him more clearly. But on the road of life, we will
always suffer thirst. Happiness, here, is not our measure.
Conceived in the Christianized language of Neoplatonic philoso-
phy, Augustine's early account of the search for happiness had not yet
acquired the theological rigor of his later works. Yet it expresses viv-
idly the truth of his own experience, providing an early account of his
discovery that the turn toward God is not an end but a beginning.
Pointing Augustine in the direction he would follow for the rest of his
life, De beata vita paved the way for his greatest work, The City of God
Against the Pagans. Begun in 413 when he was fifty-nine and completed
when he was seventy-two, just five years before his death, The City of
God consists of well over one thousand pages in modern editions and
is without question Augustine's magnum opus. On one level an at-
thought. The same reason that explained how the Christian God could
—
102 Happiness
allow a calamity on the order of the taking of Rome —and why the false
gods of the pagans were helpless to stop it — explained why men and
women suffer in this world. The City of God an explanation of evil, andis
own initiative but because it served God's plan. And now God was real-
izing his larger purpose through Rome's fall, hastening time toward its
final end in the day of judgment. When that day would come, August-
ine emphasized (like others before), no one could know, and his insis-
dered by their fellow-men and taken captive, they are chained and
imprisoned, exiled and tortured, limbs are cut off and organs of sense
destroyed, bodies are brutally misused to gratify the obscene lust of
the oppressor, and many such horrors are of a frequent occurrence." 61
This was only the beginning of a list of the "vast mass of evils" that
covered the earth, and which had done so continually since the first
had happened in the Garden of Eden, and that it was through our par-
ents' fault that imperfection had entered the world. Yet they disagreed
extensively over the ultimate consequences of this transgression and
regarding its final effect on the human race. In one influential view
articulated by Augustine's theological contemporary and rival, the
Roman Briton Pelagius — the Fall was not irrevocable but had been
undone by Christ. Men and women did not carry sin in their bones,
were not irreparably, congenitally marred. On the contrary, they were
fully capable of perfection, and it was their duty to realize this end,
terity the just punishment for their crime of pride, setting off a "chain
of disasters" that had permanently alteredhuman beings for the worse.
"The effect of that sin was to subject human nature to all the process
of decay which we see and feel, and consequently to death also. And
man was distracted and tossed about by violent and conflicting emo-
tions, a very different being from what he was in paradise before his
sin. . .
." 63 Nowhere were human beings now self-sufficient, free of
need; nowhere did they live as they wished. When they tried to love
with purity, they felt jealousy and contempt. When they struggled for
peace, hate reared in their breasts. Everywhere, we were at odds with
ourselves. Even our bodies eluded our control. Augustine the young
man and Augustine the wizened priest knew that lust "moves or fails
to move" our members "by its own right." And though he paused
with amusing deadpan to consider the case of those who can produce
at will "musical sounds from their behind (and without any stink),"
—
104 Happiness
Here was the cause of why Augustine and all others had failed
and would continue to fail — in their quest for happiness on earth. God
had condemned humanity to suffer the same punishment as our an-
cestors who had turned away from him. Vainly, we sought to live by
our own light, but in our awkward stumbling in the dark, we were
forced to confront the impossibility of that task. Amid the death and
suffering of the world, our very yearning for happiness was a bitter
reminder of our original sin, a bitter reminder of our own inability to
And so it was in vain that "all these philosophers have wished, with
amazing folly, to be happy here on earth and to achieve bliss by their
own efforts." 65 Augustine took aim at the "effrontery of the Stoics,"
who with "stupefying arrogance" maintained that even a man "en-
feebled in limb and tormented in pain" would not blush to call this
were pointless.
ness." And they alone had begun to chart the course toward that
"spring which offers the drink of felicity." Such were the similarities
between their thought and Christianity, Augustine believed, that he
was willing to speculate that Plato himself might have received knowl-
edge of the Old Testament while on a purported trip to Egypt. We
know that this was not the case. But Augustine's readiness to enter-
Darrin M. McMahon 105
tain the idea is informative, highlighting how difficult it was for this
soul as a return to God — a journey back to the One from which we are
promise.
Yet if Platonism was the "philosophy that approximates most nearly
to Christianity," Augustine fully understood that in the end it, too,
fell short of the mark. Like the other schools of the pagan world, the
God alone, through his grace, could transform and heal us. As Augus-
tine emphasized again and again, true happiness was "the gift of God,"
67
to be imparted only at death and only to the chosen few.
The disturbing implication of this judgment was that God in his
wisdom had "predestined" those who would be saved. And indeed the
rudiments of a theory of predestination can certainly be found scat-
tered throughout his works, as Martin Luther and John Calvin, among
others, would later observe. But unlike these men, Augustine refused
to dwell at length on the mysteries of the dispensation of grace. He
spoke rather with passion of what he called "the happiness of hope."
Beyond this world and its veil of tears, all Christians could take solace
in the thought that they were being led to the Lord, where our jour-
ney would be brought to its happy resolution and end. Here the
blessed would see God "face to face," see him eternally through the
106 Happiness
the beginning, when "true joy flowed perpetually from God." There
we could drink our fill, perpetually, in the kingdom without end. But
until that time we would always suffer thirst.
The manifold diversity of beauty in sky and earth and sea; the
abundance of light, and its miraculous loveliness, in sun and
moon and stars; the dark shades of woods, the color and
fragrance of flowers; the multitudinous varieties of birds, with
their songs and their bright plumage; the countless different
variety of living creatures of all shapes and sizes. . . . Then
there is the mighty spectacle of the sea itself, putting on its
68
give a complete list of all these natural blessings?
This is the voice of a man who loved life immensely, who would be
sorry to see it go; the voice of a man who felt deeply the loveliness of
the universe, who savored at every moment the precious wonder of
existence, who delighted in the simple fact of being in the world.
True, the world's very beauty and fragility, its transitory passing, and
our inability to hold it in our eyes, becomes a further cause of pain.
But this is the sweet sorrow of continual parting, the infusion of all
experience with the intensity of knowing that one may never come
this way again. Despite its inherent sadness, life is a precious gift,
and our knowledge of its transience only renders it more so. That,
too, is the voice of one who knows that the world is a passing landscape,
who knows that "as long as [man] is in this mortal body, he is a pil-
Mystical Return
Adam, where are you? This is the voice of the creator rebuk-
ing human nature. It is as if He said: Where are you now after
ninth-century gloss on the book of Genesis was Irish. Hence the epi-
thet later added to his name, "Eriugena," a native of the island of saints.
He was an heir to the treasures of learning that had been amassed in
the monasteries of this island refuge in the sixth, seventh, and eighth
centuries while so much in Europe was either lost or destroyed,
crumbled into pieces like the Roman Empire itself, crushed by the
force of invading Vandals, Huns, Saxons, and Goths. Yet by Eriugena's
time, the ramparts of this scholarly redoubt were themselves ex-
posed, threatened not by the forces that had decimated Rome but
by Northmen, Vikings, and Danes, who began to raid the Celtic fringe
in the late eighth century. Men like Eriugena went where they could,
living like Adam, in hiding, or fleeing abroad as refugees. They brought
with them bits of their precious trove: knowledge of scripture, knowl-
edge of the Latin fathers, and, what was most rare in ninth-century
tial revival of letters, the seat of what is now called the Carolingian
ing the question of St. Ambrose, who in the fourth century had won-
dered the very same thing. 73 Was this not a way of indicating the
general presence of God? And if so, then was it not also right to say
that "there is a kind of walking of God through the sequence of the
Holy Scriptures ... so that when we recall these passages, we recog-
nize the voice of the Lord as he is walking"? God, it would seem, is
forever "walking in the minds of men," but we, in our bad conscience
and sin, hide in shame, refusing to detect his presence, to return his
loving gaze. 74 The question that had haunted Augustine — how to go
to God? — gnawed also at this Irish sage, intensified perhaps by the
exile's natural longing for return. As Eriugena reflected in a long poem
dedicated to his patron, when listening to the scriptures he could hear
the home they had forsaken of their own free will became for Eriugena,
like all spiritual exiles born of Adam and banished into the world, a
question of the utmost importance.
The question was not new. Central to the early church, it had been
posed in various ways ever since, occupying Augustine, among others,
as we have seen. Augustine's theology of sin was an explicit attempt
fectly in their yearning for a felicity that they could no longer realize
or see. Well suited to an increasingly institutionalized church forced
to come to terms with the fact that the kingdom of God was not im-
mediately at hand, Augustine's theology of sin sought to free us from
what he regarded as a dangerous illusion: the "Pelagian" belief, akin
to pagan arrogance, that we could achieve salvation —secure happi-
ness —on our own.
In countering this view, Augustine tried to strike a careful balance
between free will and grace, human agency and the dynamic power of
God. But it was a delicate balance, and in some minds it tipped dan-
gerously close to a tragic fatalism with respect to our position in the
world. As a consequence, long before Luther and Calvin weighed in, at
and salvation, but he had allegedly predestined the damned for de-
struction as well, bringing their souls into existence solely so that they
fense of free will. A complex treatise, the work sought to deny that
the authority of Augustine could be used in defense of the doctrine of
double predestination, and in that aim it was not altogether success-
ful. The reasoning behind the attempt was tortuous. But Eriugena's
conclusions were perfectly clear: "And so with all the orthodox faith-
ful I anathematize those who say that there are two predestinations
or a twin predestination or one divided into two parts or a double,"
112 Happiness
Areopagite. . .
." We now know that the Dionysius in question was in
fact no one of the sort (despite his own claims to the contrary). A pro-
digious author, he lived much later, perhaps in Syria, and probably in
the sixth century, although that cannot be established for sure. What
is clear is that this so-called Pseudo-Dionysius had read deeply in Pla-
that is not and all that is, and, with your understanding laid
aside, to strive upward as much as you can toward union
with him who is beyond all being and knowledge. By an
undivided and absolute abandonment of yourself and every-
thing, shedding all and freed from all, you will be uplifted
to the ray of the divine shadow which is above everything
79
that is.
in the human psyche. Plato himself had put forth a compelling vision
of the erotic longing of the soul to merge in ecstatic union with what
lay beyond the limits of perceived reality. And when this vision was
integrated with an evolving Christian tendency to disparage the body
as the host of earthly sin, the result was a powerful impulse to spiri-
tual uplift. Like a thermal wind, it promised to bear aloft all who would
raise their minds to higher things, bearing us, as the medieval mystic
Hildegard of Bingen would observe, like "a feather on the breath of
God."
Already in the fourth century, the desert fathers had known such
powerful currents, straining and striving upward to see God through
great feats of earthly denial. These men were prepared to leave every-
thing behind, and in the person of Saint Simeon Stylites, their ascetic
{stylos) in the sand that soared some sixty feet into the sky. Cut off
from the world, Simeon lived atop his perch for thirty-six years, having
114 Happiness
his meager food and water sent up at the end of a string. This was a
literal effort to bring oneself closer to God, and it was mimicked
throughout the Eastern church. As a much later recluse was moved to
observe, "A man that Studies Happiness must sit alone like a Sparrow
upon the House Top, and like a Pelican in the Wilderness." 80 By sev-
ering all contact with the world to focus only on happiness on high,
these solitary souls attempted to soar to private communion with God.
And then there were those emaciated ones who conceived of fasting
and dietary rigor as a way to a similar end — a means to cleanse the body
of the putrid flesh of the apple that weighed it down, so that the soul
could ascend upward to a more spiritual feast. Isidore of Seville recom-
mended the practice heartily in the seventh century, observing that to
fast "is a holy thing, a heavenly work, the doorway to the kingdom, the
form of the future, for he who carries it out in a holy way is united to
81
God, exiled from the world, and made spiritual." At roughly the same
time, an Irish hymn, perhaps known to Eriugena, invited the holy to
partake in the great feast of the eucharist. The word itself means "grati-
is also akin to the Greek verb chairein, meaning "to rejoice." Whether
the monks who chanted the following lines were familiar with this root
(probably not), they surely soared in song as if they were:
Come. Holy people, eat the body of Christ, drinking the holy
blood by which you are redeemed. We have been saved by
Christ's body and blood; having feasted on it, let us give
thanks to God. All have been rescued from the jaws of hell by
this sacrament of body and blood. . . . The Lord, offered as
sacrifice for us all, was both priest and victim. . . . He gives
the celestial bread to the hungry and offers drink from the
living fountain to the thirsty. 82
"Happy are those called to his supper." 83 Christ as tender lamb, Christ
Those who practiced such penitential rigors probably did not require
theological pronouncements on predestination to know that they could
bring themselves to a higher state through effort of their own. Nor were
the musings of a Dionysius necessary to move their minds. Yet the co-
Here was a radical claim, built, to be sure, upon the classical common-
place that the happy man lived a "godlike life," but going well beyond
it to suggest that those who are happy literally become God, sharing
directly in his essential essence and participating in his spirit and power.
And though there were some scriptural precedents for this suggestion
Saint Peter's claim, for example, that Christ has given us everything
we need for "godliness," so that we may become "participants of the
divine nature" (2 Peter 1:4) —Boethius did not allude to them here.
ward light, with its attendant counsel to leave behind the darkness of
worldly things, was readily adaptable to more explicitly Christian ends.
It is in this way that Eriugena conceives of Saint John the Evan-
fast and looks upon the face of God," who in contemplating the word,
"rises above every visible and invisible creature, soars over all under-
standing, and, deified, enters into God who deifies him":
the voice of the high-flying bird, not he that flies above the
material air and aether and the limits of the whole sensible
world, but he that transcends all contemplation, beyond all
the things that are and all the things that are not. He does
this with the swift-flying wings of profound theology, the
glances of clear and lofty contemplation. 91
. «~ ^F'»
>/wi tl
3 1
out of his human condition, an escape from the body and an abandon-
ment of the self in which the saint goes beyond the strictly human
confines of reason and understanding to achieve a state of divine illu-
mination and ecstatic union with God. This was bliss, divine rapture,
the convulsive flowing forth and coalescence with the love of God that
later mystics would not fail to describe in frankly erotic terms: as the
cleaving to the breast of Mary and the taking in of her warm milk, as
the consummation of the soul as "bride of Christ" in marriage with
the bridegroom Jesus, or any number of other highly charged images
that emanated from the minds of men and women who offered their
suit of our highest good must strive also to "transmute into God," to
become God, to participate directly in his truth, to know if only in the
flash of a moment the intense spiritual happiness that would be ours
eternally in death. This was the exile's ultimate return.
the Middle Ages that meant effectively that the higher happiness of
the theologians was a monopoly of those who could afford to devote
their lives to higher things. As a later writer, the Franciscan saint
dismal face," Saint Francis added, but clearly the saints themselves
were sometimes wrong. Mere mortals, struggling to survive, could only
95
hope to steal a smile as best they could.
But we should not suppose that they never did. The ordinary people
of the long Middle Ages knew their moments of merriment. If they
managed to survive the perils of infancy —and probably close to a quarter
122 Happiness
of all babies died within a year of birth — they stood a decent chance
of living at least into their thirties, and so of weathering the climactic
shifts that killed their crops, and the pestilence, disease, and war that
killed their neighbors and friends. These were necessarily resilient
cal bliss. Otherworldly all, none of these visions was strictly incom-
patible, and their paths often crossed, with martyrs and mystics, sin-
The Deposition with Ladder (left), St. Peter's Church, Naevsted, Denmark
(c. 1375). Mills-Kronborg Collection, Courtesy of the Index of Christian Art,
Princeton University; and The ladder of Divine Ascent (Jacob's Ladder), Lambeth
Bible, mid-twelfth century, Lambeth Palace Library, London.
Diptych with Coronation of the Virgin and the Last Judgement, French,
ca. 1260-70. Note the ladder with ascending angel in the lower left corner.
plants, "in which there is already some interior production," the move-
ment of juices and the creation of seed. Then there is the level of
"animals endowed with sense-awareness," which have a "form of pro-
stand ... so that in God the idea in his mind is what God himself is." 102
126 Happiness
iar to those acquainted with the theme of the "great chain of being."
fell on many shoulders, one man bore the greatest burden. Thomas
Aquinas assumed the responsibility of converting Aristotle to Christ.
Born to minor gentry in a castle outside of Aquino, north of Naples,
church. His parents packed him off to monastery school at the age of
five, and in his teens he was transferred to the freewheeling Univer-
ent subjects. Another legend credits him with the ability to compose in
104
his sleep. But whatever the extent of his powers, it is clear that
128 Happiness
soul know the ecstasy of its final place of rest. Much like Augustine
and the Christian Neoplatonists, Aquinas interprets Saint Paul's as-
surance in 1 Corinthians 13:12 ("For now we see through a glass darkly;
but then face to face") as a promise of the beatific vision that awaits
us in heaven. 106 Gazing upon God unmediated by any obstruction
seeing perfectly with our souls, not imperfectly with our eyes —we
will partake of pure and everlasting bliss, "perfect pleasure — a more
perfect delight of the senses than that which animals enjoy, since
the intellect is higher than the senses." Nothing, nothing at all, will
be lacking, for "in that final happiness every human desire will be
fulfilled," and our joy shall be untainted by "sadness or worry that it
107
may be disturbed." In heaven, Aquinas affirms, the saints "shall
be inebriated by the plenty of thy house, and thou wilt make them
drink of the torrent of thy pleasure." 108 The saved will literally be
drunk on God.
Aquinas is every bit as thirsty as Augustine, ready to conceive of man
as a parched pilgrim, a wayfarer, homo viator. In these respects, he
walked comfortably in the footsteps of church doctrine, unwilling, and
unable, to stray too far from the beaten path. Yet Aristotle also forced
him to alter the inclination of his step. If complete happiness came
only in death, might there not still be a perfection of the journey, a
blessedness of the route? Perhaps, Aquinas proposed, we could hope
to find an "imperfect happiness" here on earth while traveling to the
"perfect happiness" of heaven.
The theological distinction between perfect and imperfect happi-
ness —what Aquinas is inclined to call beatitudo and felicitas, or beatitudo
and beatitudo imperfecta, though he sometimes mixes the terms — had
been put forth slightly earlier in the thirteenth century by William of
Darrin M. McMahon 129
end or telos that they are intended to fulfill in accordance with their
natures. When the circumstances are right, an acorn will become an
oak— a flourishing —and man become good man, happy
oak a will a a
virtue that sets us apart, our highest faculty, is reason. And the telos
tion, a process that will culminate in the final end — the end without
end —happiness.
Taking care to stress the role of God in this process of intention
ment. In both the Summa contra Gentiles and the Summa Theologiae, he
leads the reader steadily down the Aristotelian path, reaching very
similar conclusions:
this ultimate and perfect happiness as the life of those who con-
111
template the truth," Aquinas affirms. Aristotle was not wrong to
We not only can be happy in a sense in this life, but can be happy
again in the next.
It must be emphasized that these two forms of happiness stand in
Aquinas leaves no doubt that there are many evils in life that cannot
be avoided, and that human beings will always be plagued by unful-
filled desire. Given that "full and sufficient happiness excludes every
evil and fulfills every desire," it follows that perfect happiness on earth
113
will forever elude us.
restoring agency to the individual that had received impetus from the
reach purely earthly goals, Aquinas put forth a less sweeping interpre-
tation of the effects of the Fall. "Human nature," he observed in the
Darrin M. McMahon 131
the perfect happiness that is our final goal, we must follow Christ.
Here, too, we begin on our own, attempting to follow the rules re-
tues are gifts freely given, bestowed on those whom the Lord, in his
wisdom, deems worthy. They make us better than ourselves. And
though Aquinas maintains that we can never know who might receive
them, or at what point, he does observe that "When a person begins
to make progress in the acts of the virtues and gifts, one can hope that
he will attain both the perfection which belongs to the journey and
that of the destination." 115 As we move closer to our own perfection,
tensity in certain quarters that the church grew alarmed, fearing (and
not without reason) a revival of the Pelagian heresy of old. In Paris, in
particular, students at the Sorbonne pursued the study of Aristotle
with enthusiasm, daring even to affirm his superiority to Christ. The
bishop of the city, Stephen Tempier, was forced to put an end to this
evalist Georges Duby traced what he calls the "mold" of earthly hap-
piness precisely to these radical Aristotelian circles. "Happiness made
by man alone, happiness which could be won by intelligence" — this
was the incipient dream that wafted out from the schools of Paris, al-
lowing its scent to settle on the courtly love of knights and their ladies,
and on the pages of such works as Dante's Divine Comedy and the Ro-
man de la rose. us
Of course, many continued to look suspiciously on the more earthly
of these productions, even for a time casting doubt on Aquinas him-
self. But these doubts were quickly dispelled, and in 1323, less than
fifty years after his death, Thomas Aquinas was made a saint. Ironi-
cally, his feast day was set for March 7, forcing the church to push that
into the Christian fold, the theologian from Aquino had cleared a new
path — a middle way —between heaven and earth, bidding us to linger
a little longer and savor the journey, pushing back perpetual felicity
by a day.
the Middle Ages. Lumbering like armies, they were, in some cases,
ing Jews was the way to their Lord. Santiago de Compostela, a city
that from the ninth century had served as the reputed resting place
of the remains of Saint James, grew to become the spiritual staging
ground for the reconquest of Muslim Spain. Amid the tens of thou-
sands of penitents who arrived each year were knights who prayed
134 Happiness
swords home.
Missteps, mistaken routes, fatal deviations, trails of blood: Medi-
eval pilgrims took countless wrong turns. More often, they struggled
JAFrvii .. .
m> »\%.
._ •
wSRS*
l > m\ . "' v —— at »» « « mm *•
»*••* • /»^-...
Pilgrims, Trinity Chapel, Canterbury Cathedral.
—
wash away the filth that gathered on life's way. Here they could drink,
give themselves the strength to carry on. And here they could catch a
glimpse, if only through stained glass, of the perpetual felicity that
136 Happiness
the saintly martyrs and confessors who lie here —bodies whose souls
reside amidst the joys of Paradise," the author of the Pilgrim's Guide
observed in reference to the cemetery at Aliscamps, just outside of
Aries. 122 To set foot on sacred ground was to stand as close to the hap-
a barrier that cordoned off the end of the earth, separating the sacred
from the profane. Through the broken bones of a martyr, one could
see the light of heaven, but while doing so, one stared directly at death.
The way to perpetual felicity lay across that great divide.
While waiting to take their final step, all men and all women were
forced to endure the trials of the journey. As the knight declares in
that classic account of late-medieval pilgrimage, Chaucer's Canterbury
share of mirth along the way. But they understand that these moments
are fleeting,
The line might almost have been uttered by the chorus in an ancient
tragedy. Just as Augustine had conceived of life's pilgrimage in an
essentially tragic mode, many others continued to use the language
of fate and fortune to describe the daily happenings that befall us all.
ways in the strictest orthodoxy, had continued to use this pagan lan-
guage to emphasize the essential transience of all earthly things. 124
They, too, called no man happy until he was dead, and they knew that
even the most fortunate in this life would fall like Croesus in the end,
or meet their downfall in death like the Greek heroes of old. Well into
sure of that revolution — a conception come full circle — that the word
"happiness," like bonheur, Gliick, and the other terms that rolled from
European tongues in the Middle Ages and early Renaissance, retained
its linguistic connection to hap. If, and when, one knew lasting happi-
ness, it would be only by the grace of a God who intervened from be-
yond the stage of the world.
This is where the link to the tragic past ended, and another began.
To be sure, there were other important similarities between Chris-
tian happiness and the happiness of the ancient world, particularly of
the post-Socratic kind. Christians, too, conceived of happiness as an
objective state at the end of a well-marked path. A summum bonum, a
highest good, happiness remained a te/os, an end, and virtue the prin-
cipal means to guide the way. But whereas the ancients had conceived
of virtue as almost entirely the result of human striving, won only by
the efforts of a happy few, Christians understood virtue as a divine gift,
c. 1460-70, The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, © The J. Paul Getty Museum.
138 Happiness
peasants were entitled to the happiness of hope, and the hope of hap-
piness — ecstasy everlasting, eternal bliss that would make amends for
regained. In the meantime, all must bear their burden as best they
could, taking heart in Christ's pledge of redemption, courage in the
example of the saints, and delight in the promise of perpetual felicity
to come.
A counsel to patience, the happiness of hope was a powerful force,
giving men and women the strength to carry on. At the same time, it
armed them with an explanation for their pain. In the medieval Chris-
tian conception, unhappiness was not an aberration, an individual fail-
ing or fault, but the natural condition of every human being since the
Fall. Continually renewed in Sunday sermons and the extraordinary
number of holidays that ordered Christian time —from the joyous cele-
always, just beyond reach. Did not the faithful ever feel that they were
being led along? Perhaps an element of suspicion was always right
beneath the surface, for in a sense it was called into being by Christian-
ity itself. In its rejection of Roman felicitas, Christianity had denied the
things of this earth, casting aspersions on sex and sensuality, wealth and
—
Aquinas assured, and his assurance begs a question. Was not Christian-
ity promising the very thing it denied, "a torrent of perpetual plea-
sure," a lifeless lifetime of eternal bliss? If human desire was to be
rewarded then, why must it be denied so completely in the here and
now? Aquinas had already taken steps toward narrowing the gap be-
tween the imperfect happiness of earth and the perfect happiness of
heaven. In the coming centuries, men and women would bring the two
closer still.
From Heaven
TO EARTH
Lotario was arguably less miserable than most. But that did little to
prevent him from doing full justice to the title of his work.
From birth to death, Lotario explains, men and women are simply
and what begins with gladness ends in sorry." 2 As with gluttony, so with
the product of all our desires: "What goes in vilely, comes out vilely,
These are the by-products of man. "Alive, he brings forth lice and
tapeworms; dead, he begets worms and flies; alive, he produces dung
and vomit; dead, he produces rottenness and stench." 4 A seething,
stinking mass of sin, we suffer in this world. And all those who are not
saved will suffer in the next, rotting in the infernal darkness of hell,
seems, does Lotario offer a new beatitude: "Happy are those who die
before they are born, experiencing death before knowing life." With
reason do babies cry at birth. 5
Such kicking, screaming shrieks of despair were certainly audible
age. A long black night that descended on Europe from the fall of the
Roman Empire until the awakening of the fifteenth-century Renais-
sance, this was a period, it seemed, when humanity wandered blindly
in ignorance and despair, fumbling like man in Lotario's dark vision,
"a sojourner on the earth, and a wayfarer," enduring the world as a
6
place of exile, "confined in the body as in a prison."
Few informed observers share this view today. On the contrary, they
tend to emphasize the technological and intellectual vitality of the
Middle Ages, drawing particular attention to the "renaissance" of
the Carolingian ninth century, and the "renaissance" that began in the
twelfth, leading to the establishment of the great European universi-
ties, the building of the High Gothic cathedrals, and the revival of
interest in Aristotle that reached its apogee in the work of Thomas
Aquinas. They might also point to the fact that contemplation of the
misery of the human condition was hardly unique to the Middle Ages.
Arguably, only after Europeans had endured the terrible carnage of the
Black Plague, which wiped out roughly one quarter to one third of the
total population in the second half of the fourteenth century, were
they fully prepared to take up De Miseria Condicionis Humane. Works
bearing that same title continued to appear throughout the great Re-
naissance of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, while many others
Christ, went to great length to remind its readers, "Life on earth is truly
wretched." It was among the most widely read works of the fifteenth
and sixteenth centuries. 7
It is misleading, then, to conceive of the transition to the European
Renaissance as a stark passage from dark to light. Rather, change oc-
curred as it more often does, in subtle modulations and tones. Those
critics, commentators, artists, and theologians who attempted to de-
pict happiness during this time drew their colors from the palette of
their predecessors, even as they combined and built them up in new
ways. They extended their interest in ancient authors, pushing on the
boundaries of Christian doctrine and testing the limits of original sin.
And they took upon themselves the unfinished projects of the Middle
Ages. The Misery of the Human Condition is a case in point. Lotario had
promised to follow that work with another that he believed would
serve as its perfect complement, a work to glorify the "dignity of
the next the humble man [will] be exalted." 8 Lotario died before he
was able to compose his sequel. But authors in the fifteenth and six-
teenth centuries did so for him. Reviving interest in what the Romans
had termed the studia humanitis —grammar, rhetoric, poetry, ethics, and
history — the "humanists" of the Renaissance aimed to cultivate learn-
ing that would, in the words of Leonardo Bruni, one of their leading
proponents, "perfect man." In doing so, they carried the pursuit of
happiness in new and unexpected directions.
He knew not only Latin and Greek but Hebrew, Aramaic, Arabic, and
Syriac and used these languages in a quest to show the underlying unity
of all knowledge. For Pico, the newly rediscovered riches of classical
Greece and Rome, the mythology of ancient Egypt, the secrets of the
Talmud and Cabala, the mysteries of Zoroaster, and the wonders of the
natural world alike complemented the truths of Christianity. He made
it his short life's work to demonstrate this correspondence, offering to
do so, publicly, at the impressive age of twenty-three.
Vowing to pay the travel costs of anyone in Europe who would come
to Rome to debate him, Pico put forth nine hundred "theses" or con-
clusions on an astonishing array of subjects. They would, he claimed,
"show not that I know many things, but that I know things which many
people do not know." 10 Undoubtedly this was true. But Pico never had
the opportunity to prove the point. A Vatican commission deemed a
putation and forcing Pico to write a formal apology before quietly with-
drawing, first to France, and finally to Florence, where he spent the
last years of his life writing in a villa provided by Lorenzo de Medici at
Fiesole. He died at the age of thirty-one and is buried in the great
church of San Marco.
Although Pico produced a great many other works —including an Ital-
for their introductory oration, "De Dignitate Hominis," "On the Dig-
nity of Man" (1486). Often invoked as the manifesto of the Renaissance,
this brief essay, more than any single work of the period, has seemed to
11
generations of commentators to capture the spirit of the times. Jacob
Burckhardt, the greatest nineteenth-century scholar of the Renaissance,
wrote that it was in fifteenth-century Italy that "men and mankind were
. . . first thoroughly and profoundly understood," and that it was Pico
who plumbed their depths. "The loftiest conceptions on this subject,"
Burckhardt believed, were uttered in this brief oration, "which may
justly be called one of the noblest of that great age." 12
Burckhardt saw much that was noble in Pico. But it was above all
the Italian's apparent sense of the freedom and majesty of man that
bitions and travel brochures, one can still find many of its central fea-
that determines our greatness or our depravity, our dignity or our con-
fold Narration of the Six Days of Genesis (1489) —he makes it clear that
"Through the first Adam, who obeyed Satan rather than God and whose
sons we all are according to the flesh," Pico writes, "we degenerated into
beasts, disgracing the form of man." And now, in the aftermath of our
fatal free choice, it is only through the "newest Adam," through Jesus
Christ, that we "are reformed by grace and regenerated." Without him,
we are liable to succumb to our animal selves, for when "the image of
God has been blotted out by the stain of sin, we begin to serve the beasts
in us, wretchedly and unhappily . . . sinking to the ground, eager for
earthly things, forgetting . . . our Father, His kingdom, and the original
dignity given to us." 21
Mindful always of our own weakness, we must
say, with the apostle, "Our sufficiency is from God." 22
A significant corrective to the view that Pico was somehow an apolo-
gist for an early modern Prometheus unbound, the Heptaplus places
man in the only spot its Renaissance author could have conceived: the
Darrin M. McMahon 147
deed noble. The earth, the elements, and the beasts wait upon him,
the heavens labor on his behalf, the angels watch over his salvation
and beatitude. Composed of matter and spirit, reason and substance,
human beings are microcosms of the universe, "which we encompass
within us." But like the planets of the solar system, we are moved in
our orbits by God:
you will be left wretched and unhappy in your own torpor and
weakness. If you let it in, you will be carried back at once, full
cannot complete ourselves. "To this level man cannot go" but must
be "drawn" —by Christ, "who is felicity itself."
24
For this quintessen-
tial Renaissance figure, true felicity, perfect happiness, is not of this
148 Happiness
earth. Nor is it within our power alone to achieve, "since nothing can
rise above itself by relying on its own strength." 25
Pico does, it is true, speak also of a second, or "natural" felicity (felicitas
the potential that lies within all created things to realize themselves in
the way that God has intended. Whereas circular motion, "through
which a body is carried around to the point from which it started," serves
mortal and incorruptible bodies (the planets and the soul) move in
circles. And they must be moved. But elements of a less exalted sort
"need no other force than the impulse of levity or gravity imposed on
them at creation, just as individual things are brought to their natural
felicity by their own proper impetus and force." All things in the cre-
ated world, that is, can propel themselves to a relative felicity in keep-
26
ing with the best workings of their own natures.
Thus, Pico can refer, rather strangely, to the "felicity" of fire, which,
when it has attained its natural perfection, "is happy to the extent that
it is capable of happiness." "More happy are the plants, which also have
life; and happier still are the animals, which have been allotted con-
sciousness, so that the more perfection they have, the more divinity
they find within themselves." At the top of this ladder is majestic man,
who exceeds all save the angels in his potential for natural happiness.
"Being possessed of those extraordinary endowments greatly condu-
cive to felicity, intelligence and the freedom of choice," man can cul-
the first felicity, but also of the second, the natural, since it is only a
corrupt and fallen nature that does not desire grace." In short, there
can be "no philosophy which separates man from religion." 31
carrying out a dramatic break with the "otherworldly" Middle Ages and
the patristic past of old. Pico was in truth a representative figure, but
not for the reasons frequently assumed. The humanism that he typi-
fied, like the period in which he lived, developed naturally, often in-
distinguishably, out of the concerns of preceding centuries. With good
reason does one leading scholar observe, "There was nothing particu-
larly new or original about Renaissance views of man." 32
But though the humanists of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries
did not discover man or his happy world, they did intensify interest in
they accorded a status, prestige, and sanctity greater than ever before.
They learned Greek and perfected their Latin on Roman models, at-
of what the sage had said. It was one of some thirty-two new transla-
ence of the study of the true God. It was partly Pico's acceptance of
this claim — that God could speak just as relevantly, if less directly,
through the words of the pagan authors as he did through the biblical
prophets — that drew to him the suspicion of the Vatican.
Pico took greater care in the future to contain his enthusiasm, but
the slip pointed to a potential tension. Just as the incorporation of
Aristotle into the teachings of the church by Aquinas had worked to
mitigate the impact of original sin, creating a space for the cultiva-
tion of a natural felicity on earth, so did the Renaissance's extended
engagement with classical thought make room for further reflection
For it is possible for a wise and good man, learned and accom-
plished though he be in all the virtues, to be reduced to a
state of poverty, bereavement, or exile; he could lose his
country, have his patrimony taken from him, his children and
relatives killed. He might even be cast into a tyrant's prison,
152 Happiness
than a few Renaissance men and women did strive for a measure of
worldly happiness, and their momentum carried them up against the
limits of received assumptions. In calling to account an author who
how one who had never known happiness in life could be expected to
enjoy it in death. Following Aristotle, and like Pico and Thomas
Aquinas before him, Morandi was prepared to carve out a realm, how-
40
ever imperfect, in this world for the pursuit of human ends.
It was precisely this impulse —an impulse born of the sustained
reengagement with classical thought, thought that took as its point of
departure the cultivation of earthly ends — that motivated men and
Darrin M. McMahon 153
lead Raphael to imbed the schools of Athens in the walls of the Vatican
could lead a painter as religiously inclined as Agnolo Bronzino to imag-
ine felicity clothed only in classical garb. His Allegory of Happiness
(Allegoria della felieita) is a modern rendering of the Romans' Felicitas
Publica, whose image and allegory had become widely known to the
ishing praise on the different goods of this earth that she conferred. 42
Parte Prima.,;
Z??! ^* l,
/ n''<, "* ^ lito |MrffalB!cf.("iJiv.a.^J -. -
FELICITA PVBLICA
Kmna
NeBi Mcdaglu d. Giolu ran qucftc Icttcre.
FELICITAS I'VBUU.
Relict
strikes a pose as if for the catwalk, draping a free hand seductively over
the base of her sword. Cupid/Eros, for his part, is more eager. Spilling
into Happiness's lap, this naughty nymph prepares to pierce her with
his golden shaft. But lest he transgress, fawning Prudence —Janus-
faced to look forward and backward, to the future and to the past
keeps watch over her delicate charge, guarding Happiness from
violation. Glory and trumpeting Fame hover overhead, while Time, in
possession of the celestial sphere, and Fortune, with her wheel of fate,
genuflect at Happiness's feet. At the extreme left, blind Envy flees
from view. Folly, in a fool's cap, is trod under Prudence's step, and
make quick work of Kairos, the Greek god of chance, who writhes,
defeated, at the very bottom of the canvas. Only the angels above
suggest the happiness of a higher realm. In the confined space of this
picture, Happiness reigns supreme.
As the court painter to Cosimo I de Medici, ruler of Florence from
1537 to 1574, Bronzino likely intended this work as a commentary on
his patron's reign. The masculine face of the prudential Janus bears a
striking resemblance to Cosimo himself, and the terrestrial globe that
Prudence holds is turned so that Italy lies at the very center of the
43
world. After decades of war and upheaval at the hands of foreign
armies, Florence, Bronzino suggests, had won prosperity and indepen-
dence, beating down Folly and Fury, making Fortune the servant of
its fate. Projecting military power into the surrounding Tuscan coun-
tryside, Cosimo had ushered in a revival of the arts and letters in the
It may even have dared to smile. It is striking, in fact, that the same
lavish attention paid to earthly detail in so much Renaissance art was
trained, as well, on the beaming human face. Although smiles were
not unprecedented in Western painting and sculpture — they fre-
156 Happiness
quently enliven the faces of the kouroi, for example, those statues of
standing young men popular during the Archaic period of Greece in
the sixth and seventh centuries bce — since the advent of Christian-
ity they had been overwhelmingly reserved for religious figures. And
even in these circumstances, they were used only sparingly to brighten
the faces of those known to enjoy certain beatitude: the blessed Vir-
gin, Adam and Eve before the Fall, the angels, and the saints. 44
Darrin M. McMahon 157
ally signified "black bile," derived from the Greek melan (black) + chole
like the brain and kidneys, and choler fed what was hot and dry, black
from the spleen (where its excess was allegedly held) induced melan-
choly. Frequently associated with sadness and morbid depression,
this disorder could produce a slew of diverse symptoms of varying
severity, ranging from "windy melancholy" (flatulence), hemor-
rhoids, scabies, coughes, hoarseness, aches in the joints, and falling
weather and climate on our state of mind, such medicinal advice was
dispensed in unprecedented volume during the Renaissance.
True, not all Renaissance humanists viewed melancholy as a prob-
lem. Pico's teacher Marsilio Ficino, for one, was inclined to see the
condition in a somewhat different light. Drawing on what he and
others considered, erroneously, to be a text by Aristotle that alleged a
close association between melancholy and genius, Ficino linked the
accumulation of black bile in certain special cases to breadth of imagi-
nation, intellectual acuity, and the powers of prediction and fore-
49
sight. Natural black bile is "conducive to judgment and wisdom," he
stated in The Book of Life (1489), arguing there that in its rarefied form,
With the others, individual parts of the body are given plea-
sure as the palate by food, the nostrils by the rose and the
violet; but with this kind, the whole body is partner to the
pleasure. It is a kind of joy, also, that is felt by not one but
many senses; let it be touched upon only most briefly here
162 Happiness
was he who first established, through textual analysis, that the writ-
ings of Pseudo-Dionysius could not have been those of Dionysius the
Areopagite mentioned in the Acts of the Apostles as a disciple of Saint
Paul. Challenging the apostolic authority of this work, he likewise chal-
lenged the purely contemplative understanding of the beatific vision
so dear to the Neoplatonists and medieval philosophers. Valla's heaven
is one of feasting and dancing and amusement, sweet as the smell of a
rose, where "not a day, not an hour, not an instant of time . . . will see
tue leaves little room for the rigors of ascetic denial. 56 Like a later work,
the monk Celso Maffei's Pleasing Explanation of the Sensuous Pleasures of
Paradise (1504), and other Renaissance descriptions of the afterlife, the
the freedom, they concluded, and the ability, to make the world a
better place. A celebrated humanist like Erasmus might devote a vol-
ume to the "praise of folly," concluding ironically that "to know noth-
57
ing is the only happiness." But it is quickly apparent that this "folly"
is in truth the highest wisdom: a blend of Saint Paul's "foolishness of
the cross" and the injunction of the man whom Erasmus described as
"Saint Socrates" to begin the search for truth with the avowal of igno-
rance. Together, such folly would not only reduce the suffering of the
world but also lead to self-knowledge, which Erasmus praised as an
essential point of departure in the search for happiness. 58 The other
place to start (and more important to end) was God. "All we have to
do is turn our minds to things spiritual," Erasmus avowed, and "the
way to happiness is a rapid one." 59
Erasmus, no less, to whom the Praise of Folly was dedicated — first gave
the world a new word, Utopia. In Thomas More's masterpiece of that
name (1516), the inhabitants "love and reverence Almighty God, to
Whom we owe our existence and our potentiality for happiness." But
they also "regard the enjoyment of life ... as the natural object of all
164 Happiness
pends time to triumph over fury, folly, fortune, and deceit. A product
of the imagination, set in a faraway place, the Utopia of More does not,
nor can it ever, exist, but serves, rather, as a foil to satirize the many
less than happy practices of the real world with which he was well ac-
quainted. Nonetheless, More's conception set a standard — a human
standard —by which to measure the real shortcomings of life with an
eye to improving them. By fully exercising their God-given freedom,
the work suggested, human beings could raise themselves and their
world closer to heaven.
Justhow high could one go without God's help, and how high
was one expected to go before God extended his hand to help pull
us along? The freedom of the Renaissance humanists their injunc- —
tion to rise to the utmost heights of human dignity was apt to pro- —
voke anxiety in humanity's highest achievers. Martin Luther was
such a man; in his struggles to fully realize himself, he grew conscious
of the sin that continued to weigh him down. As he did so, he con-
ceived a new image of Christian freedom and a new image of human
happiness.
year, the leader of the Reformation was twice the age of the sad prince,
who suffered from bouts of melancholy despair. Luther saw fit to offer
a word of advice:
sin to be happy, Luther came to believe, but it was because of sin that
we were not. Eating away within us, concupiscence was an ever present
reminder of our inherent worthlessness, which only God's clemency,
the mercy of his "gifts" could dispel. As Luther had observed in a
166 Happiness
cess on the psychological forces that may have shaped his develop-
63
ment. They call attention to a harsh and somber childhood, the
implacable demands of a father who sought to dissuade Luther from
his chosen career as a monk, and to a number of crises — fits, break-
downs, and prolonged periods of despair — that all this may have pro-
voked. It was at the end of one such period of extended depression
that Luther apparently achieved his "breakthrough," the dramatic
experience in the tower.
The year was 1519, two years after the young monk is supposed to
have nailed his famous ninety-five theses, protesting the sale of papal
As Luther himself later recalled the episode, his spiritual epiphany was
brought on by anxiety and dread:
Having, for some time, steeped himself in the writings of Saint Paul,
Luther was driven to distraction by his inability to answer a funda-
that we can be? Like an unremitting father whose love we can never
prayer, and penance, he could not set his mind at rest. Fed by per-
sonal psychology and sustained by his long engagement with the the-
ology of Saint Augustine, Luther's sense of human worthlessness was
boundless. Trapped within himself, his guilt could not be appeased
until he was set free in the tower, while contemplating book 1,
168 Happiness
that I was born again and had entered into paradise itself
67
through open gates.
Here was the basis of Luther's greatest insight, the realization, drawn
from Paul, that we are "justified" made]ust, not punished with jus-
tice — through faith alone, and that this faith itself is a gift from God.
We cannot earn faith — it is freely given —and its effects are radical
birth anew from God [cf. John 1]. It kills the old Adam,
makes us completely different people in heart, mind, senses,
and all our powers, and brings the Holy Spirit with it. What a
that someone would die a thousand times for it. This kind of
trust in and knowledge of God's grace makes a person joyful
[froh/ich], confident, and gay [lustig] with regard to God and all
68
creatures. This is what the Holy Spirit does by faith.
This total, transformative power to kill the old Adam — the sinful,
selfish creature that lurks within us all — forms the basis of Christian
impeded direct confrontation with the divine. In the end, the faithful
distinctions between the sacred and the profane. If there was no hier-
archy in the ascent to God (only the division of the damned and the
saved), there could be no privileged place or profession in which to
pursue this end. Rotterdam was as holy as Rome, the mineshaft as
world all became fields for the cultivation of God's glow in what the
philosopher Charles Taylor has called the "sanctification of the ordi-
nary," or the "affirmation of ordinary life." 73 For the Reformation's
for whom the notion of the "calling," or divine vocation, assumed cen-
tral importance. 74 But it was firmly rooted in the most basic of Protes-
tant propositions: Luther's assertion of the priesthood of all believers
and his contention that we are saved by faith alone. God had created
the world, and he "saw that it was good." But we had lost sight of this
goodness, viewing creation through the veil of tears that is human
selfishness, blinded by our own sin. That veil could be lifted by grace,
however, allowing us to see creation in the way the Lord had intended,
Darrin M. McMahon 171
as "a pleasure garden for the soul." 75 It was Luther's fervent belief that
"we may be relieved of the blindness and misery in which we are
steeped so deeply, and may truly understand the Word and will of God,
and earnestly accept it." For thence we would "learn how to obtain an
abandoning his own clerical celibacy to marry a former nun, with whom
he had six children. To love one's wife, to feed one's children, to gov-
ern a family, and to honor one's parents were not mere "secular and
carnal duties" as the "papists" believed, but "Fruit of the Spirit." 78 In
the same way, Luther insisted that we pick freely from all of God's
bounty. The man who had once starved and flagellated himself in his
anxiety to be worthy of God now saw merit in drinking deeply of God's
creation.
Yet there is little to suggest that Luther ever managed to put his
anxiety completely to rest, or that he came to know the happiness in
all things that he recommended to the prince of Anhalt. On the con-
trary, he was plagued to the end of his days by intermittent spells of
depression. "Be strong and cheerful and cast out those monstrous
thoughts," he advised in another letter, stressing that "sometimes we
must drink more, engage in sports and recreation, aye, even sin a little
to spite the devil, so that we leave him no place for troubling our con-
sciences. . . . What other cause do you think that I have for drinking
so much strong drink, talking so freely and making merry so often,
except that I wish to mock and harass the devil who is wont to mock
and harass me." 79
When one considers that for Luther, "all sorrows,
illnesses and melancholy come from Satan," it is clear that he did not
80
live always in the assurance of grace. "A Christian should be gay,"
Luther admitted, "but then the devil shits on him." 81
172 Happiness
joy. As Calvin concluded, "If praise and thanksgiving to the Lord can
only proceed from a cheerful and joyful heart —and there nothing is
they also set men and women free to search for happiness on the hal-
,ANCHOLIAM EX
Not all found the Protestant tonic so bracing. In its grim reminder
that only the chosen would be saved, the cure seemed to some worse
than the sickness it aimed to abolish. Sin lurked in the world, and it
lurked in the human breast, giving the devil more than his due to make
of us what we were without grace: miserable, wretched creatures
Darrin M. McMahon 175
afflicted by sadness, anxiety, and doubt. Until men and women could
conceive of their emotional lives without Satan, and of their selves
without sin, happiness would remain, like the old Adam, menaced by
melancholy and shrouded in despair.
Gravitational Pull
When the young John Locke went up to Christ Church in 1652, the
quiet world of Oxford was a very different place from what it had been
only ten years before. During much of the preceding decade, a pro-
tracted civil war had torn England apart, pitting supporters of the
reigning monarch, Charles I, against the armies of Parliament and the
leading Puritan statesman, Oliver Cromwell. Parliament's victory,
capped by Charles's execution in 1649 (an event probably witnessed
firsthand by Locke while still a pupil at Westminster school), ush-
ered in a period of experimental government in which Cromwell pre-
sided over a republican commonwealth, and then over a protectorate,
ruled largely at his command. When Cromwell died in 1658, his son
clung to power for a mere two years before the country restored the
Stuart throne. It would take another twenty-eight years, and another
revolution — the "glorious" one of 1688 — to reconcile the nagging
arguing that all God's children would be saved: Heaven lies within us,
we bear no sin at all. More than a few of these radicals were ready to
But why may not we have our heaven here (that is, a comfort-
able livelihood in the earth) and heaven hereafter, too . . . ?
ness or fearing a hell after they are dead, their eyes are put
out, that they see not what is their birthrights, and what is to
91
be done by them here on earth while they are living.
Like the Ranter Abiezer Coppe, they urged the chosen people of
England to journey forth to "Spiritual Canaan (the living Lord), which
is a land of large liberty, the house of happiness . . . flowing with sweet
." 94
wine, milk and honey. . . In this place, the temporal and the ce-
lestial would be one.
As the allusions to Exodus make clear, many of these hopes had
been expressed before. When the Puritan millenarian Thomas Brooks
claimed that "being in a state of Grace will yield . . . both a Heaven
here, and Heaven hereafter," rendering "a man's condition happy, safe,
and sure," he was merely reaffirming much of what Luther and Calvin
95
had already said. So, too, was his widely held belief in the imminent
arrival of the New Jerusalem a variation on a recurrent theme. Shared
by Christ's followers themselves, anticipation of the millenarian
moment had resurfaced periodically ever since, erupting with particu-
lar force in the immediate wake of the Reformation among Dutch and
German Anabaptists. Even the English radicals' most shocking sug-
gestion — that sin itself might be a lie —was but the latest articulation
English civil war was not entirely without precedent, its scale and in-
was. Those seeking (to cite the revealing title of a contemporary tract)
The Way to Happinesse on Earth did so with greater faith in the possibil-
ity of reaching that end than almost any group of men and women in
96
the West since the coming of Christ. The bloodshed of the civil war
cast a pall over such optimism, and the repression of the more radical
apologist was anxious to concede in the first year of the civil war, "We
must look through all things upon happinesse, and through happiness
upon all. . .
." For this force "giveth law to all our actions," he empha-
98
sized. "Happinesse is the language of all."
the seventeenth century. But just when and how he developed his
views —and whether and how the literature of the 1640s helped to
shape them — not is weentirely clear; lack sufficient information about
the genesis of Locke's thinking. Studying moral philosophy and medi-
cine, Locke lived quietly in Oxford until the late 1660s, first as a stu-
dent silence about the events that swirled around him in his youth.
Certainly, Locke was no admirer of the Stuarts. Only ten when the
civil war began, he was a Puritan by birth and the son of an officer in
Cromwell's army. Over the course of his life, Locke's religious views
evolved in unorthodox directions; but he never renounced his faith. Of
his deep suspicion of monarchs, his later career bears ample testimony,
suffusing the work for which he is today most often remembered, the
Two Treatises of Government. Historians have long suspected that the Two
Treatises may owe more than a little to the output of the 1640s, particu-
larly to that of the Levellers, with which there are notable similarities."
But in the absence of a direct, evidentiary link, they are left to conclude
that it was "from conversation and casual contact, not from documen-
tary acquaintance that Locke inherited the fruit of the radical writings
of the Civil War." 100
Much the same might be said about Locke's rela-
tionship to the mid-seventeenth century's fruitful writing on happiness.
For though there is no written testimony of a direct connection, it does
seem unlikely that he would have remained entirely unaffected by this
in new ways. It was left to Locke to conceive a new theory of the human
mind to accommodate this novel aspiration.
Two Treatises.
m But in his other masterwork, the Essay Concerning
Human Understanding, the subject figures prominently. Begun as early
as 1671, though not published until December 1689, the work — far
peculiar, often conflicting habits, customs, and beliefs that litter the
world, Locke concludes that we cannot be born with any fixed notions
or ideas, moral or otherwise. If it were true, as many philosophers in
the classical and Christian traditions had alleged, that the law of na-
ture was inscribed in the hearts of all (or, as Locke's rough contempo-
rary Rene Descartes had maintained, that "innate ideas" accompanied
us at birth), then it would surely follow that young children and the
uneducated would agree on their duties, or at least know what they
are. But nowhere was this so, leading Locke to conclude that we are
born into the world with minds like an "empty cabinet" or a "white
piece of paper," a blank slate.
This was Locke's famous tabula rasa, and in the bulk of the Essay
he endeavored to show how the world writes upon it, imprinting itself
on our minds. Explaining this process in detail, he elaborates the com-
plex mechanics of the motion of thought that lead from the physical
sensations we receive from the external world to the formation of ideas
For not only does Locke's tabula rasa clear away the rubbish of innate
ideas, it wipes our slate clean of original sin. Locke was under no illu-
sions about the quantity of evil in the world. And he fully understood
the stubbornness of self-interest. But he refused to accept that we are
born into the world with minds inherently marred, deficient in rea-
son, and tending toward corruption.
To the degree that human beings give indication of any natural
propensity at all, it is in a very different direction. "What is it that
determines the Will in regard to our Actions?" he asks in the critical
choice." Locke's blanket term for "all pain of the body" and "disquiet
of the mind," uneasiness is invariably accompanied by desire, which is
That we have come across similar reflections before may obscure the
tremendous novelty of this passage. Locke's argument here is remi-
niscent of Epicurus, who also envisioned pleasure and pain as the
motive forces of human action, the great movers of human desire. The
debt is straightforward, though not direct: Locke drew his Epicurean
views largely from a seventeenth-century French mathematician and
priest, Pierre Gassendi, who had attempted to build a Christian sys-
tem on the shoulders of Epicurus. 106 The Englishman was not quite
so foolhardy, but in truth he does seek to Christianize important Epi-
ing fancy. It was thus of the utmost importance that the seeker of
happiness remain ever vigilant in calculating pleasures and pains.
"This is the hinge on which turns the liberty of intellectual Beings,"
Locke affirmed. As the "highest perfection" of our nature lay in "a
careful and constant pursuit of true and solid happiness," it was in-
107
cumbent that "we mistake not imaginary for real happiness."
But how was one to distinguish the two? This was the great ques-
tion, and given its magnitude, Locke's answer may strike us as less
tive of his general orientation toward the faith. Religion could com-
mand our assent only when it was in accordance with reason, Locke
held, a conviction that led him many of the historical ac-
to discount
The last line is revealing. For in fact Locke had skirted dangerously
close to imagining a world without such foundations. Given, as he had
argued in the Essay, that "pleasure in us, is that we call Good, and what
is apt to produce Pain in us, we call Evil," one could be led to conclude
that good and evil were merely matters of taste. 111 And since one man's
pleasure was another man's pain, in the absence of a better world to
justify this one, the road to happiness would branch out in countless
certainly right, Let us eat and drink, let us enjoy what we delight
i n for tomorrow we shall die.
,
x 1
and Knowledge, and another Hawking and Hunting; why one chose
Luxury and Debauchery, and another Sobriety and Riches" would be
simply "because their Happiness was placed in different things." Some
men liked lobsters, and others liked cheese. To try to satisfy them
with the same pleasure was an impossible task, a reflection that
prompted Locke to dismiss the inquiries of the ancients after a single
single journey to a single end. Locke was not willing to multiply the
"continual progress of the desire, from one object to another, the at-
taining of the former being still but the way to the latter." And so the
in obtaining those things which aman from time to time desireth, that
is to say, continual prospering, is that men call Felicity; I mean the
..
of mind, while we live here; because life itself is but motion, and can
never be without desire, nor without fear, no more than without
sense." In Hobbes's view, human bodies could be at rest only when all
motion stopped. Until that time, they would be ruled by "a perpetual
and restless desire of power after power, that ceaseth only in death." 115
This was not an altogether consoling picture. Yet it was one present
just below the surface in Locke. "We are seldom at ease, and free
enough from the sollicitation of our natural or adopted desires," he
acknowledged in the Essay, "but a constant succession of uneasiness . .
take the will in their turns; and no sooner is one action dispatch'd . .
but another uneasiness is ready to set us on work." 116 Here, too, the
individual was caught up in a restless and perpetual chase, an endless
pursuit. Given "the multitude of wants, and desires, we are beset with
in this imperfect State," Locke confessed, "we are not like to be ever
freed from [uneasiness] in this World." 117 Were it not for the haven of
peace in the next life, the pursuit of happiness would have no end.
As we will see in later chapters, this prospect would return to haunt
the Western imagination. But in Locke's own day, and for some time
thereafter, his readers were largely content to overlook such disconcert-
of this life were not so sweet, Locke presented them as part of a con-
conception of man and mind. 120 Intended by our creator to pursue hap-
piness as a law of nature, we must not be impeded in our course or de-
flected from our path by the power of an outside force. It was not
sufficient, as the Roman emperors and other absolute monarchs had
done, simply to proclaim felkitas temporum, the happiness of the times.
Liberty was an indispensable condition of the natural trajectory of hap-
piness and of its proper pursuit. As long as we did no harm to others
or impeded their paths —we should be allowed to pursue our own.
This must also include the freedom to choose poorly, the freedom
to go awry. For in Locke's view, a necessary element of human dig-
is still doubted which is this right one. Now neither the care of
dividual liberty and choice, Locke placed the burden of pursuit on the
shoulders of men and women, not on their governments. To provide
the free space in which to pursue our ends was one thing, to secure
those ends another. Even the "right enacting of laws," Locke knew,
was unlikely to discover the "one true way" to happiness. We should
ever be wary of the attempt.
Nevertheless, by establishing the principle of the consent of the
governed, and by giving citizens the right to cashier their rulers when
they acted in defiance of the common good, Locke's ideas, like the
revolution they aimed to uphold, admitted a new place for happiness
in the political vocabulary of the West. If human happiness was genu-
inely intended by the laws of the universe and the order of creation,
then surely any government that impeded its attainment did not rule
in keeping with the natural order. Did it not follow, in some measure,
that governments had a responsibility to provide for the happiness of
the governed? Locke himself observed that "the public good is the rule
and measure of all law-making," and "If a thing be not useful to the
commonwealth ... may not
it presently be established by law." 122 But
what did "useful" imply? And if the limits of the pursuit of happiness
were those actions "destructive to human society," what did "destruc-
tion" entail? Far from ending debate on such questions, Locke's theo-
Arts of Contentment
own Art of Contentment (1675). Few today will have heard of Allestree,
but in his own time, he cut quite a figure. The provost of Eton Col-
lege and a leading Royalist divine, Allestree had personally taken up
arms to fight with the forces of Charles I during the civil war. He
had since become a popular moralist, and with The Art of Contentment —
a work that went through over twenty editions, remaining in print
Darrin M. McMahon 189
until the nineteenth century —he captured the tenor of his age in
within our own breasts." Happiness lies within us all, and Christian-
ity shows the way. "'Tis certainly the most excellent, the most com-
The title page of a 1675 edition of Richard Allestree's Art of Contentment. Bodleian
Library, The University of Oxford.
190 Happiness
pendious art of happy living" ever formed. "All the lines of worldly
happiness are concentrated" there. It is the unum necessarium, the only
necessary thing we need to have the "grand and ultimate happiness"
of the next life, and this our "intermedial" happiness as well. 125
Allestree made these points in the book's first pages. As unimpeach-
able as it is conservative, the remainder of the work counsels thankful-
ness, deference to authority, and acceptance of one's circumstances:
precisely what might be expected from this Restoration supporter
of space. And amid this upheaval in the cosmos, a new divinity was form-
ing, which religion, too, was learning to serve. Like its predecessors,
earthly happiness would show itself to be a jealous god.
This great reorientation of the human gaze —from the joys of heaven
to the happiness of earth — took place slowly, and in fact had scarcely
begun. It is nonetheless revealing that a man such as Allestree — a high
piness lay within us, both believed, and though religion could show us
the way, there was increasing scope for thinking that we generated
momentum on our own. The two men would have agreed on little else.
inertia of this belief —and it was considerable —the new perspective was
gathering force. The final two decades of the seventeenth century wit-
Darrin M. McMahon 191
nessed an explosion of works on happiness, and the very titles are re-
way to get Riches, Encrease Plenty, and Promote Pleasure, a tract extolling the
unlikely art of making "Wine of English grapes." 128 This, surely, was the
ultimate affirmation of ordinary life.
afforded to the "spiritual benefits" of pain over the course of the sev-
enteenth century. 129 Another of the long-term consequences of the
Gerard Audrand and Pierre Mignard, The Felicity of the Blessed. Design for the cupola
of the church of Val de Grace, 1693. Musee de Louvre, Paris.
tist, the future poet laureate of England, Nahum Tate. In 1681, Tate
published an adaptation of Shakespeare's tragedy King Lear, which
sought to improve upon the original by, among other things, giving the
play a happy ending. Rather than conclude the drama in a bloodbath,
like the bard, Tate preferred to spare the life of the heroine Cordelia
as well as that of her lover, Edgar, so that the two might marry and
live, like Lear, happily ever after. As strange as these alterations may
seem today, Tate's adaptation proved tremendously appealing to con-
growing conviction that human beings need not wait for the next world
to bring their lives to a happy conclusion.
This is probably pushing the interpretation a little too far. Yet it is
undoubtedly the case that one witnesses in the poetry of this period
the consolidation of a more general image of the "happy man," who
succeeds in living his days happily until the end. The image is that of
rural innocence had never been forgotten: Even medieval poets were
familiar with the message of Horace's carpe diem. 132 But the recovery
of his work that began in the Renaissance gave the theme a freshness
monde" that can still be found hanging in the foyers and entry halls of
pered always by the Christian spirit, the theme of the happy man in
rural retirement came intoown in seventeenth-century England,
its
his own:
Much of this poetry amounted, like Horace's own, to a none too subtle
critique of the corruption of the times. To preach rural retirement
was to urge withdrawal from the business of the world, a theme that,
in the hands of Royalist poets like Vaughan and Cowley, could be di-
rected explicitly against what they saw as the unfortunate ascendance
of Puritans. Indeed, the invocation of Epicurean themes of innocent
pleasure — like Allestree's Tory contentment —was frequently in-
spair. The general forces that had worked to create a space for earthly
happiness in England were at work abroad, too. In Scotland and Ireland,
in the American colonies, and on the European continent, influential
home. With the help of advanced biblical scholarship and a firm grasp
conscious that his view was slowly being eroded — less by competing
theories of the position of the earthly paradise than by a decline in
the all-encompassing belief in human sin. It may be true, as the famed
English soldier and explorer Sir Walter Raleigh once observed, that "all
of us have a deep-rooted desire to know the place where our first par-
ents lived." But the passion for the discovery of the place of the bib-
J. Moxon, Paradise, or the Garden of Eden, London, 1695. One of many such
geographical renderings of the Biblical Paradise. The Garden of Eden can
be seen in the right middle. By permission of the British Library.
Darrin M. McMahon 199
lical Eden was driven above all by theological concerns. 2 Only by fully
determined the magnitude of our subsequent Fall. And so, as the pre-
occupation with inherent human evil waned, so did the need to know
the precise coordinates of a long-vanished Eden. At the end of the
seventeenth century, Huet's treatise was gratefully received by the
Sun King, Louis XIV. Just decades later, Voltaire spoke for the ex-
ploratory interests of a new age. "Earthly paradise," he quipped, mock-
ing Huet, "is where I am." 3
. This shift in perspective —from the longing gaze in the direction
of a vanished golden age to a steady look straight ahead —was never as
as the paradise in Heaven continued to exert its pull. Yet the eigh-
The great goal of the century, it was expressed time and again. "Does
not everyone have a right to happiness?" asked the Abbe Pestre, the
As far away as Warsaw, the College of Nobles saw fit to organize a lec-
Saint Petersburg, the privileged were allowed to join in the fun. After
striking a favorable peace with the armies of the Ottoman Empire in
the balance of pleasure over pain, then what of the age-old links tying
happiness to higher things: to God, virtue, or the right ordering of the
soul?Was feeling good the same as being good? Was being good feeling
good? Was happiness a reward for simply living, or a reward for living
well?
Authors of the eighteenth century wrestled with these questions,
and in their struggle to provide answers, they unwittingly revealed
what only the most enlightened souls of the century were prepared to
<"»&?
Felicific Calculus
But why this dramatic reorientation and shift in the eighteenth cen-
tury — a shift whose clearest index was the explosion of interest in
a happy world after all," concluded the Reverend William Paley at the
the wonders of creation. The world was as it should be, reflecting the
happy design and purpose of its maker.
Paley's was a common perspective, one that came to be shared by
many Catholics as well. Already by the second half of the century,
otherwise orthodox members of the church were penning treatises
with popular titles like / Want to Be Happy, The School of Happiness, and
The Theory of Happiness, or the Art of Rendering Oneself So }* True, virtu-
ally all of these works continued to insist that religion was the founda-
tion
—"the unique basis" — of earthly happiness, to cite one such title
the rise of nation states equipped with standing armies and civil ad-
all too easy to forget, in fact, that the pursuit of earthly happiness as
something more than good fortune or a millenarian dream is a luxury
in itself. Only when individuals are free from the vicious daily pursuit
of staying alive can they afford to undertake the pursuit of more ex-
alted goals. Whatever one's final definition of happiness, it is rarely
compatible with regular and periodic famine, the ravages of plague and
pestilence, or the threat of marauding armies.
Such scourges did not cease in the eighteenth century, but by com-
parison with earlier periods, the century fared well. To take one re-
vealing example, it is estimated that in the first half of the seventeenth
celain and textiles, luxuries were at hand and available to ever wider
segments of the population, subject, like the exploding market for styl-
ish garments, to whims and fancies, fashion and trends. They appealed
directly to the century's fascination with pleasure. As the French gov-
ernment minister and philosopher Anne-Robert-Jacques Turgot ob-
served, people in modern commercial societies "as it were, bought and
20
sold happiness."
items and services with the explicit aim of enhancing pleasure and
reducing pain, men and women pursued happiness in the manner that
the desire, from one object to another, the attaining of the former
21
being still but the way to the latter." Economists and moralists, from
Adam Smith to Karl Marx, would find much of interest in this progress
208 Happiness
the differences that divide the French from the British Enlighten-
ment, or the German from the American, or the Protestant from the
Jewish.
These debates are healthy and very much in keeping with the En-
lightenment spirit, regardless of the different forms this movement
assumed. For if historians today continue to debate the differences
and the fine points, few would deny that a significant cultural and
intellectual phenomenon swept Europe and the Americas in the eigh-
teenth century, and that collectively it raised the art of raising ques-
tolerance and the right to question all things. Their defense bespoke
confidence in the possibility of social progress through knowledge, and
faith that better understanding could make the world a better place.
Drawing heavily on Newtonian science and Locke's new science of
the mind, they put forth a picture of a harmonious universe, governed
by discernible laws. And at the center of this universe, they placed
human beings unstained by original sin, programmed for the pursuit
of pleasure, and ready, willing, and able to improve their earthly lot. If
mate question 'How can I be saved' into the pragmatic 'How can I be
happy?'" The answers, eighteenth-century men and women increas-
22
ing alone.
Of course, the philosophers of classical antiquity had also posed
questions in an effort to know themselves, and they, too, had focused
counterparts. For Plato, Aristotle, and the Stoics, pleasure was of com-
paratively little importance in cultivating the good life, which was
deemed compatible with significant suffering and sacrifice. Even
Epicurus was at heart who sought first to minimize pain
an ascetic,
rather than to maximize pleasure. Though pleasure was a good in
210 Happiness
que le jeu de la vie humaine" Voltaire was moved to reflect shortly there-
after: "What a sad game of chance is this game of human life." He was
the greatest number," or what was meant as the same thing, "the
greatest good of the greatest number." The cornerstone of the En-
lightenment principle of utility, the phrase is generally associated with
the English lawyer and theorist Jeremy Bentham, but it was employed
by many others before him. Indeed, when Bentham declared in his
question . . .
," he was merely reiterating what was already a wide-
spread eighteenth-century conviction. 29 Figures as diverse as the Scot-
tish moralist and University of Glasgow professor Francis Hutcheson,
the German scientist and mathematician Gottfried Wilhelm von
Leibniz, the Italian legal theorist Cesare Beccaria, the French philoso-
pher Claude-Adrien Helvetius, and the French historian and soldier
the Marquis de Chastellux had all employed the felicitous phrase in
30
various forms. They did so in a common effort to establish what one
critic has called the great Enlightenment attempt "to create a science
31
of man based on numerical gauges for all his activity."
Darrin M. McMahon 213
Hutcheson, for example, observed in his 1725 Inquiry into the Origi-
nal of Our Ideas of Beauty and Virtue, "that action is best, which procures
the greatest happiness for the greatest numbers, and that worst which,
in like manner, occasions misery." The first edition of the book in-
It was efforts like these that prompted the English author Benjamin
Stillingfleet to satirize a growing European trend. His Some Thoughts
Concerning Happiness (1738) purported to be a translation from the
original German by one Irenaeus Kranzovius that would "clear up the
Confusion which has hitherto reigned in this Affair." 34 Given that
mankind in all ages had been thwarted in the search for happiness,
placed great emphasis on the many impediments that had long stood
in their way. The inhuman practice of slavery and the terrible disrup-
tions of war were among the most obvious, but they were of a kind
tion more flourishing, more robust, more prosperous than in the golden
age of Greece and Rome? Using population estimates, and the related
index of food supply, some of the century's finest minds argued that
42
it was. Chastellux, whose own work was in many ways a parting shot
at the ancients, was thus in good company and on solid Enlightened
ground.
Beginning with the ancient Egyptians, Assyrians, and Medes,
Chastellux weighed each of his factors over time, pausing at length to
consider the civilizations of Greece and Rome before moving on to
Western Christendom and ending in his own century. He showed him-
self a sanguine man. For though he refrained from specifying particu-
lar countries, he concluded that the happiest peoples in history were
those of contemporary Europe and their transplanted offspring in
North America. On the whole, the positive outweighed the negative:
Harvests were greater, populations larger, wars fewer, and "enlight-
enment" {lumieres) better diffused than ever before. Even the persis-
tence of slavery could not tip the balance in favor of the past. By
comparison with ancient times, that terrible institution was now far
The same general conclusion was shared by others. Basing his as-
sertion on the decline of superstition and the availability and extent
of pleasure, Helvetius declared the eighteenth century the "century
of happiness." 43 The Milanese economist Pietro Verri largely agreed,
arguing similarly in his Meditazioni sulla felicita (1763) that his was the
happiest epoch in all of human history, the most enlightened and the
least susceptible to senseless pains. Yet self-congratulation of this kind
should not be taken as a sign of complacency. The majority of En-
lightened advocates of the "greatest happiness for the greatest num-
ber" — Helvetius, Verri, and Chastellux included —saw their work as
pleasure over pain, robust population growth and fine harvests were
only the beginning of a pursuit that was just getting started. The scope
for maximizing and minimizing accordingly was practically endless. "In
civilized nations, and therefore in the whole of mankind, the sum of
well-being is perpetually on the encrease [sic]" Bentham observed,
echoing Locke. The Scholastic and classical belief in a final place of
rest, a summum bonum, was, like the age-old search for a "philosopher's
stone," "meaningless and absurd." 44 Pleasure could always be ex-
panded or enhanced, and pain could always be mitigated or reduced.
The opportunities for improvement were vast.
In this way, the principle of utility armed eighteenth-century critics
with a powerful tool that could be applied, as Bentham affirmed, to
"every action whatsoever," used to judge the usefulness of all things.
Did a given practice, on balance, bring pleasure or pain? Were the ef-
graved on our hearts." 47 Seeing that happiness was the positive balance
of pleasure over pain, it followed that to deny pleasure to the majority
could be done only through ignorance or injustice. Pleasure and its sad
twin, pain, Bentham wrote in The Fragment on Government, were the
"only consequences that men are at all interested in." 48 In his most
detailed work on the subject, The Principles of Morals and Legislation,
Bentham laid this out even more clearly:
fecundity, and purity of pleasure and pain, one could "sum up" the
totals of each and then "take the balance" of the whole. The resulting
continue distinct as they were before, one man's happiness will never
be another man's happiness: a gain to one man is no gain to another:
you might as well pretend to add 20 apples to 20 pears."
51
The fact
really so clear that pleasure was our highest calling? Bentham and his
in the world ("the chain of causes and effects") and the measure of
how we ought to act ("the standard of right and wrong"). To claim
otherwise, they believed, was either self-deception or blindness to
220 Happiness
* .|
„ 6C c J*
^ bO c _s c
.S *« « 3
> .
_2 o o -p
3 .s J8 " L
co
CO f-
. 3 w co ,3 "U
= u '3 -3
3 E 2 w
Q M £ c^ af ^ —a """" ^~ ~~!
£ c g 'S u
O ^ tvj ro 9 '= .9- = o u
D O
zi
c
U 2
W I 3
a
c £r >- a bfi £ fcuC
3
w *O
a c
U
c
u > .2"3 > u
c
o a ££ a a: J Q C
-* M f^ ^t it; O
isii
zL
_ w
co O t) >
b£
C J« T k
'-5
5:
c s
o I! I
a.
iv H «
Y I
TJ T3 O U
2 ° C
z
o P o
bJD
C
3
the true ways of human beings. Yet neither their arguments nor their
assertions were enough to prevent intelligent commentators from
continuing to maintain that there were other springs to action besides
pleasure — duty, honor, patriotism, and faith, to name only a few —and
that it was good that this was so. Otherwise, was one not forced to draw
a rather dubious conclusion — that feeling good is being good, that cul-
tivating pleasure, no matter what its form, was a virtuous moral end?
Bentham, to his credit, could be candid about the fact, acknowledg-
ing in a celebrated reference that the "quantity of pleasure being
equal, pushpin is as good as poetry," pushpin being a popular
53
eighteenth-century game. But for the sake of argument, it might
have been anything at all, including lobsters or cheese.
Indeed, the dilemma raised by Enlightened utilitarianism was pre-
cisely the dilemma foreseen by Locke, who had pointed out: "Were
all the Concerns of Man terminated in this Life," then "why one fol-
lowed Study and Knowledge, and another Hawking and Hunting; why
one chose Luxury and Debauchery, and another Sobriety and Riches,"
would simply be "because their Happiness was placed in different
54
things." Locke held out the hope that the prospect of otherworldly
salvation would help mortals give priority to their various earthly ends.
Locke's words, "in its full extent the utmost Pleasure we are capable,
and Misery the utmost pain," and if there really was no everlasting
heavenly bliss to direct our actions here on earth, then did it not make
perfect sense to eat and drink with abandon, to amass as much plea-
sure in life as one possibly could? This was the conclusion reached by
one man at midcentury. In his work and the scandal it provoked, we
are offered a banquet of Enlightened contradictions.
222 Happiness
One last time the great gourmand reaches for his wine. Gas billows
from below, exploding in an awful taste of what, only moments ago,
seemed delightful. Truffles and pheasant have gone to bile.Some-
thing is terribly wrong. Eyes bulge, the trousers tighten, sweat forms
on the brow. Perhaps monsieur would care for more? Spilling forward
as the room sways, monsieur overturns his glass, catching as he falls
too sweet.
Stories this perfect are seldom true. And the story of the transub-
stantiation a table of Julien Offray de la Mettrie is no exception. He-
donist the scandalous physician most certainly was — sensualist and
scientist, atheist and bon vivant — he had even foretold the delights
of sucking pleasure from death. Love and the end "are consummated
by the same means — expiration," La Mettrie observed in his System of
55
Epicurus (1750). It would seem a fittingly climactic prognosis. And
true to the tale, La Mettrie did dine at the French ambassador's resi-
dence in Berlin shortly before his death. But it was only later that he
fell ill, and weeks after that he died, in 1751, at the still-unripe age of
forty-two. Whatever the final cause (which remains, to this day, un-
certain), it is clear that La Mettrie did not meet his fate in his plate,
had met —and become— his just desserts. Others improvised with
the coda of a last-minute conversion. But it was the Enlightened
themselves who joined most vociferously in writing off La Mettrie
as a menace and a fool. "Dissolute, impudent, a flatterer, a buffoon,
Darrin M. McMahon 223
final literary production The Little Man with a Long Pole, not a work in-
tended to lift the soul. 57 Voltaire, for his part, had personal reasons to
be unkind. At the court of the Prussian king, Frederick the Great, the
two exiles had competed for favor and La Mettrie had clearly won.
Frederick even deigned to deliver La Mettrie's funeral address;
Voltaire was deeply annoyed.
But what grudge did Diderot and the others hold, and why were
they so quick to dismiss La Mettrie as a "frenzied madman" (un vrai
58
frenetique) and even worse? Was he not, as he claimed, a child of the
Enlightenment, working to "break the chains of prejudice" and to il-
luminate all with the "torch of experience"? And did he not strive, in
everything he did, to further human happiness, conceiving of man as
a military doctor with French armies in the field, he did not think it
its bodily parts, the final product of the interactions of matter. Just as
the stuff of plants gives rise to living, creeping things, and the mate-
rial of animals begets creatures that howl and crawl, might not the mat-
ter of men spawn beings that live, think, and feel? In La Mettrie's daring
suggestion, matter itself could creep and crawl, think and feel. Matter
itself could live. When that suggestion was coupled with the equally
shocking speculation that the stuff of all living things —whether plants,
tually always kept apart: matter and mind, the body and soul. For
the Greeks, as for their Christian heirs, the two substances were
separate and distinct, the one inferior to the other. To suggest that
our loftiest essence — the immortal breath blowing through our mor-
tal bodies — might be only gristle and bone was a radical claim. In
effect, it was to blur the lines between animal, plant, and man, hint-
ing that all were self-generating machines.
There were, it is true, ample precedents on which La Mettrie could
draw in constructing this materialist system. Epicurus, the notable
had extended this claim, using it as a basis to dispel false fears. Given
that we and the world were but a swirling mass of atoms, we needn't
be bothered by ghosts, ghouls, and other phantoms, just as we needn't
dread punishment in a world to come. Neither spirits in life nor souls
in death should cause us fear. They do not exist.
La Mettrie drew openly on this tradition, coming to think of his
ture ofman and the soul from life — or, more accurately, from death
observing the human body from the inside out in his capacity as a
physician: on the operating table, the anatomist's slab, and the field
looked inside our furry cousins, one saw much the same. "Slit open
the guts of man and animals," La Mettrie later challenged. "How can
you grasp human nature if you never see how the innards of the one
exactly parallel the innards of the other?" 62 Like a clock ticking in its
that the soul is but "an empty word to which no idea corresponds." 64
For far too long human beings had been induced to think about this
subject by people whose claims to knowledge had no basis in fact.
"What have others to tell us, above all, theologians?" La Mettrie asks on
to experience — they "take flight with the wings of the mind," soaring
into the nether world of meaningless abstractions. Only a posteriori, on
the basis of careful observation, "by unraveling the soul as one pulls out
the guts of the body," could one hope to gain real clarity.
65
When one
had done so, probing and illuminating the labyrinth that is man, it be-
came clear that the "soul" is the shell of a word, the vestige of more
primitive ways of thought. Viewed under the light of modern science, it
simply disappeared.
To have one's soul ripped out is an uncomfortable experience in any
age, a fact that accounts for much of the violent reaction to UHomme
machine. But for La Mettrie, the operation was a simple procedure, re-
beliefs, human beings had made themselves sick, starving their bodies
in order to feed the illusions of the mind. Sacrificing life to death, and
this world to the next, they had transformed pleasure into sin. In La
Mettrie's view, this was a terrible subversion of nature, which every-
where showed signs of running smoothly on its own. "Nature has cre-
ated us uniquely to be happy, yes, every one of us, from the worm who
crawls, to the eagle who loses himself in the clouds." 66 Alone of all natu-
ral creatures, human beings denied themselves their natural due.
Happiness, it was clear, must begin by acknowledging frankly what
we are —material beings, sophisticated animals, complex machines.
This would lead in turn to the jettisoning of the vestigial doctrine of
the soul. But La Mettrie did not rest content there. Proclaiming the
material body, he moved on to proclaim the material world. If the soul
could not be found in the matter of man, neither could God be found
Darrin M. McMahon 227
the mouth of a "friend," claiming "to take no sides" in the debate over
the existence of God, it was clear where his sentiments lay:
the branches of religion would be cut off at the root and die.
No more wars incited by theological arguments, no more
soldiers of religion, terrible soldiers! Then nature infected by
a sacred poison would recover its rights and purity. Deaf to all
mate extreme. For La Mettrie not only charged, like many others,
that blind religious superstition was an impediment to human happi-
ness, he also alleged that any belief in God whatsoever precluded the
full flowering of nature's bounty. This was no soft deism, the com-
fortable notion that a clock-maker God had started the world ticking
and then left it to run on its own. This was atheism, naked and plain.
As open-minded as the Dutch might be, they would have none of that.
Like the French, they threw La Mettrie's work to the flame, and
rather than suffer a similar fate, the disobedient doctor absconded
once again, leaving the country in early 1748.
He landed this time not in a state whose traditions and laws guaran-
teed a minimum of tolerance, but in one where freedom was dispensed
from on high, according to the whim of the monarch. Nonetheless, in
Frederick the Great, La Mettrie found a sovereign disposed to look
on his theories with indulgence, for Frederick was a skeptic himself.
He granted La Mettrie a pension; secured him a place at the Berlin
228 Happiness
will be happier than whoever receives less from doing good. . . . Hap-
piness is individual and particular, and may be found in the absence of
virtue and even in crime." 68 Slightly later in the same Discourse on
Happiness, La Mettrie is even more explicit:
more to your liking. Wallow in slime like a pig, and you will be
69
happy in their fashion.
It should be said that La Mettrie himself had little passion for mud.
And though he repeatedly presented sensual pleasures —opium dreams,
succulent wines, and erotic passion — as models of happiness fulfilled,
him to acknowledge, quite happily, that one man's happiness was an-
other man's pain. As Locke had pointed out, some liked lobsters and
others liked cheese. La Mettrie only lengthened the table, so that all
There was, however, relatively little place for reason at this feast.
tion alone was the force that moved man's machine, then reason, like
230 Happiness
delicious forms. And pleasure was never sweeter, more intense, than
when it was lewd. So he sought with perfect logic to find "lewd plea-
sures" wherever he could. As he advises all libertines in the opening
letter to one of his most famous works, Philosophy in the Bedroom, "No
74
voice save that of the passions can conduct you to happiness."
Casanova and Sade, like La Mettrie, thought and lived at the ex-
lus — highlights even more graphically than the case of La Mettrie the
Darrin M. McMahon 233
claim, in writing off the likes of Sade and La Mettrie as immoral men
scandalous degenerates lacking in virtue — Enlightened utilitarians
were forced to draw less on the self-evident principles of the age than
on the moral capital of the past. Without fully acknowledging the fact,
their own assumptions were what one noted scholar has described as
"parasitic," in that they lived off truths that they themselves no longer
nourished and sustained. 75
With respect to happiness, these were "truths" that had accumu-
lated slowly over the centuries, amassed by Hebrews and Hellenes,
classicists and Christians alike: that happiness and virtue, happiness
and right action, happiness and goodness were one. That happiness,
far from being a natural complement to life (to say nothing of a natu-
ral right), was not a gift of living but a reward for living well — a reward
teenth century, there were still enough Stoics around and those who
knew their Bible —men and women steeped in classical teachings on
happiness and rich in the legacy of Christian virtue — so as not to ef-
face entirely the line that separated being good from feeling good. But
to a much greater degree than it avowed, the eighteenth century lived
on this inheritance —on borrowed time. 76
Happy Islands
island, but I could have spent two years, two centuries and all
"What then was this happiness?" Rousseau asked. "Wherein lay this
great contentment?" The "men of this age would never guess the an-
swer," he believed, for it involved neither great pleasures nor newly
Enlightened truths. It was rather a state of perfect wholeness and
plenitude of being in which Rousseau felt himself "self-sufficient like
God," a state
78
often experienced on the Island of Saint-Pierre. . . .
ary sealed off from the sufferings of the world, in which the source of
19
The Happiest Island in All the World. Ever since, travelers on holidays
have reenacted this venerable myth, flocking to once deserted isles to
The Happy Isles. This fifteenth-century map by the Italian Grazioso Benincasa
shows the Happy or Blessed Islands concentrated in a large bay on
the west coast of Ireland. By permission of the British Library.
—
236 Happiness
his difference with rough manners and rough dress, abandoning wig
and stockings for long hair, shaggy beard, and a jet-black Armenian
cape. Unwashed and unkempt, Jean-Jacques Rousseau was a proto-
type of the alienated artist, a bohemian long before La Boheme.
Despite this disaffection, Rousseau also knew that to live as a
stranger among men was a flawed means of escape. In his more lucid
moments, he suspected that even his reverie of perfect happiness on
the Island of Saint Pierre was that of an "unfortunate man," the con-
solation of a castaway, the "compensation for human joys" that in truth
he genuinely desired. Although Rousseau did not confess, like a later
happiness could exist in the modern world anywhere but in his memo-
ries or in his dreams. "I doubt whether any of us knows the meaning
of lasting happiness," he despaired, in what was at once a typical re-
flection of maudlin self-indulgence, philosophical conviction, and con-
82 83
genital emotional state. "Happiness leaves us, or we leave it."
84
was an undeniable truth. Repeatedly, he emphasized the point. "Even
in our keenest pleasures there is scarcely a single moment of which the
heart could truthfully say: 'Would that this moment could last for ever!'
How can we give the name of happiness to a fleeting state which leaves
our hearts still empty and anxious, either regretting something that
In his misgivings about the viability of happiness and his open dis-
belief that one "must be happy." "That is the goal of every being which
senses," he adds. "That is the first desire which nature has impressed
upon us, and the only one which never leaves us." 87 This is Rousseau's
contradiction: on the one hand, the doubt and despair of ever being
happy in the world as he knew it, and on the other, the desperate
certainty that this must be so. In wrestling with this contradiction, he
hit upon a vexing thought. What if the advance of modern civilization
was the cause of this conflict, leading human beings not closer to their
intended end but farther away, farther away from themselves?
This was the disturbing prospect that Rousseau raised in his 1750
Discourse on the Arts and Sciences. An answer to a public essay question
sions — the very things that made human happiness possible accord-
ing to the Enlightenment dream at the same time militated against
it, severing man from his fellow man, from the world, and from him-
self. "In the midst of so much industry, arts, luxury, and magnifi-
cence," Rousseau observes in his so-called SecondDiscourse, the Discourse on the
Origin and Foundations of Inequality Among Men, "we daily deplore human
miseries, and we find the burden of our existence rather hard to bear
with all the ills that weigh it down." "Always asking others what we
are and never daring to ask ourselves. ... In the midst of so much
philosophy, humanity, politeness, and sublime maxims we have merely
a deceitful and frivolous exterior: honor without virtue, reason with-
out wisdom, and pleasure without happiness." 89 In Rousseau's maud-
lin picture, "civilized" humanity was all surface and no center, modern
man a shell of his true self.
And what was this authentic self? What would men and women find
if they dared to confront who they really were? Rousseau believed that
the answers to these questions had been buried beneath the pancake
makeup of an affected age, weighed down by powdered wigs and plat-
form hair. By scraping away such accretions and digging down to the
skin, he hoped to catch a glimpse of our pristine state, to see us, un-
same boundaries and limits that nature has given to our being; let
91
us begin, in a word, by gathering ourselves here where we are.
folded in sinful human flesh. The conflict between the two (body and
mind) could lead as fine a navigator as Pascal to lose his way. "Where,
u
then, is this self?" Pascal asks ( Ou est done cemoi?") "if it is neither in
92
the body nor in the soul? What is the self?"
Rousseau was thus not the first to treat his own person as terra in-
cognita. But he was one of the first to secularize this language, to speak
of the soul, of the self, as a maze through which we wander in search
of a better nature, an elusive inner light. And so, what for many En-
lightenment thinkers was treated as a self-evident truth became for
240 Happiness
As in all things, nature showed the way. For Rousseau had no doubt
that in his pristine state, man was perfectly content. As he observes in
man has stayed, the smaller is the difference between his faculties
and his desires, and consequently the less removed he is from being
95
happy." Natural man feels no impulses that go beyond his ability to
detail, re-creating the minute series of events that might have led natu-
ral man away from his self-contained innocence. The details —by
Rousseau's own admission merely speculative — are less important than
the larger force that drives them: what Rousseau calls "the faculty of
self-perfection," or simply "perfectibility." This is the fatal quality that
Darrin M. McMahon 241
lies in reserve in the depth of the soul, the very quality that is at the
summon ever new desires and to place our reason in the service of their
unhappy or seek a new form of being from which he can draw the
resources he no longer finds in himself. 98
contract aims to provide a civil and moral liberty to replace the lost
extremes of wealth, ensuring that all have what they need but not sig-
ing words are Rousseau's own from the Social Contract, and although
he explicitly states elsewhere that "there is no government that can
force the Citizens to live happily; the best is one that puts them in a
tions or property —
but rather to give us back what we allegedly have
lost and now can have only if we "seek a new form of being" in the
Faith, however, can conquer all. Even in his doubts, Rousseau per-
petuated the hope — the great Enlightenment hope — that happiness,
sembled the Christian narrative of original sin. And his insistence that
with "a poor, incomplete and relative happiness such as we find in the
Enlightened Doubts
Samuel Johnson was a man of Christian faith who frowned at the pi-
eties of his age. When asked by James Boswell whether a "man was
not sometimes happy in the moment," Johnson replied, "Never, but
when he is drunk." Boswell, like Johnson, enjoyed his wine. And
Boswell, like Johnson, enjoyed his life, despite repeated bouts of
despair. On a later occasion, as the two raced through London in a
In the past or the future, one could be happy, but in the present, only
articulated his views. His long poem "The Vanity of Human Wishes"
Pride, animus, envy, and folly animated these scenes, helping to en-
sure that earthly happiness, like all else of human making, would be
fleeting, destined for dust. "Time hovers o'er, impatient to destroy, /
makes the Happiness she does not find." For Johnson, human beings
were perennially restless. This was the way of the world. 106
With its Judeo-Christian emphasis on the sin of human pride and
the vanity of earthly pursuits, Johnson's message smelled somewhat
of old. But it was considerably more than a musty restatement of long-
held religious truths. Johnson's concerns about happiness, in fact, were
very much of the moment — so much so that he returned to the same
theme in greater detail in a later work, The History of Rasselas, Prince of
Abissinia (1759). An eighteenth-century parable, Rasselas follows the
wanderings of a young prince as he races from his edenic kingdom in
"the happy valley" to he knows not where. In the happy valley, Rasselas
has everything; no pleasure is spared. Yet his "hopes flow beyond the
boundaries of his life." Observing the flocks of the fields, he pines,
"When I see the kids and the lambs chasing one another, I fancy that
107
I should be happy if I had something to pursue."
manifold paths that promise happiness at their end. But nowhere does
Darrin M. McMahon 247
he find what he seeks. The conclusion of the work, "in which nothing is
concluded," ends with the very longing that sent Rasselas on his way.
If not for its humanity and humor, Rasselas might seem a depressing
tale. But its message is not entirely bleak. Johnson appreciated the
achievements of his age, and he said so often: His vision of the world
was no contemptus mundi. When Rasselas hears of life in contemporary
Europe and the many advantages enjoyed there — the fruits of knowl-
edge and science, industry and commerce —he speculates that "they
are surely happy . . . who have all these conveniences." He is told in
response by his African friend, a poet who has traveled the world: "The
Europeans ... are less unhappy than we, but they are not happy." 108
Johnson did not deny human progress any more than he refused to
smile. But he did worry that men of his age were forgetting their natu-
ral limits. Strong black coffee to clear the head of an evening's wine,
his work served as a sobering reminder of the ancient wisdom of the
Christian Fall. Whether pulling the reins of the post chaise, a cork from
a bottle, or an apple from the stem, desire led us onward but seldom
to peace. This was the human condition. To believe otherwise was an
illusion that could be sustained only when drunk.
A timeless message, Johnson's words were timely, too. For in the age's
obsession with happiness, he correctly identified a revolution in the
making. Whereas human beings, for centuries, had regarded suffering
as their natural condition, they were coming to think of happiness as a
natural right. The change was profound. "The time is already come," a
man of the modern view tells Rasselas, "when none are wretched but
109
by their own fault." Neither original sin nor the mystery of grace, the
movement of the stars nor the caprice of fortune controlled our fate.
Intended to be happy, we should'be happy, if only we dared to claim our
due. Bringing with it a whole new range of attitudes that clashed with
venerable taboos, the new bearing on happiness attacked impediments
to sexual pleasure, material prosperity, self-interest, and simple delight
for simply standing in the way. As baseless fears and prejudices were
overcome, the new joy would spread. Even a yearly almanac distributed
on the continent in 1766 felt obliged to make the point:
—
248 Happiness
May the New Year and those that follow bring happiness and
peace to the hearts of all men. We can be certain of this
happiness if philosophy continues to enlighten the world and
if men of all nations, joined together by talent, cultivate the
arts and humanity more and more. These are the miracles that
talent and art have wrought; let us cultivate them in peace, and
the social bond will encompass more and more of us as man-
kind enjoys unprecedented prosperity. 110
device of the happy ending that was emerging as a new, and increas-
ingly common, convention in popular fiction and stories for children
resolving the dilemmas of protagonists in this life, not the next —such
works suggest how far, and how wide, the promise of happiness could
spread. 111 The seed of a dream had been planted that continues to
grow to the present day, steadily expanding an aspiration that, prior
But now that the end was now, or rather of this life, the long Chris-
tian apprenticeship in happiness deferred had a curious effect. For now
that the end was now, did not everyone have the right to hope for sal-
vation? The new faith, like the old, was universal in its potential, and
the good news of the modern gospel was free to travel with missionary
speed. All could be happy. All should be happy. All would be happy
someday. These were the miracles that talent and art were making in
Darrin M. McMahon 249
the world. Scarcely a century before, rulers had been required to lead
in the service of the faith and morals of their subjects, to lead in the
service of God. They were now being asked to serve a different lord.
the English utilitarian Joseph Priestley observed. 112 From the great-
est good to the greatest number, this was the voice of a new age.
at a loss to explain "why evil pervades the earth." "I am ready some-
times to despair," the Brahmin observes, "when I think that after all
assert just that. "In fact," he comments in his Groundworkfor the Meta-
physics of Morals, "we find that the more a cultivated reason devotes
Darrin M. McMahon 251
itself to the aim of enjoying life and happiness, the further does man
get away from true contentment."
116
He used the observation to de-
liver a broadside at the utilitarian tradition:
"Making a man happy is quite different from making him good," Kant
further observed. He used the term "happy" in its eighteenth-century
sense, as pleasure or good feeling, and clearly he was right. For if the
proposition that doing good (living virtuously) meant feeling good
(being happy) was always dubious, it was more dubious still that feel-
ing good meant being good. Virtue, Kant reaffirmed, with an air of
common sense, was sometimes painful. And those who were happy,
who felt good, were sometimes bad. 118
Kant developed this thought at much greater length, coming to the
conclusion that happiness, "at least in this life," was not necessarily a
the legislative assembly in Paris. Some at this stage might still have
claimed to detect a whiff of the barnyard about the man, who, it is
for the death of the old king, albeit with an uncharacteristic tinge of
regret. It would have been preferable, he mused, to condemn the
despot to a life in the galleys. But matters of state security,
1
alas, did
not permit such indulgence.
Indeed, it was on just such a matter that Lequinio found himself
here in the western port city of Rochefort, standing without indul-
gence in a former Catholic church in the autumn of 1793. He served
as an official "representative-on-mission" of the directing revolution-
ary government, dispatched to the provinces by the Jacobins, the
dominant faction in power, and charged with spreading the word. The
group took its name from its place of meeting in Paris, the former
w it Irmi* J'uijmM- iomme arJem/ rt plan )t ri<,u*ur . It3?>rmiaut «rfWf' p*r /» fmft^um, tttta^L i ttr ,et ««#
fumssm/ iv.f Inutt am*r «m ffJr
» ianArmr, *imJu f«- if ft~*UJw,r *«*?£./.*</*,</ rf '
The happy man of the Revolution. "In the guise of an ardent young man full of
vigor, the French are regenerated by the Constitution, which carries them to
happiness, while blind fanaticism, pride, and ferocious ignorance are repulsed by its
and the Gregorian calendar to which the faith had given rise. In the
place of these antiquated forms, they vowed to establish a new society
and social contract, based in large part on the principles of Rousseau.
From the highest reaches of the convention — in the upper seats
known as "the Mountain" —the Jacobins were laying down a new cov-
enant and a new law, a new form of being for the man of virtue and a
new concept of time to honor their creation.
And so, what otherwise would have been a Sunday in early Novem-
ber 1793 was now a decadi in the month of Brumaire in the Year II,
the tenth day of the ten-day week, set aside for reverence and rest in
the second year since the destruction of the Bourbon monarchy. And
what otherwise would have been a Christian house of worship was now
Rochefort's "Temple of Truth," proclaimed as such several days ear-
lier by Lequinio himself, who had personally seen fit to expel the stub-
then, see if there are means that will allow us to arrive at this
goal, and explore what they might be. 2
they wanted, working like stupid beasts until the last hour. It
No, those who would live in freedom must abandon such puerile illu-
sions: There was no future life. When our fibers harden, our heart
stops, and our blood ceases to flow, we are no longer. Bodies decom-
pose, reverting to their constituent elements, which serve, in turn,
to create "new beings —worms, fish, plants, and a thousand other liv-
Darrin M. McMahon 257
ing things." But "never will there be anything more of us again ex-
cept in scattered molecules," and in the memories of our survivors.
4
No, citizens, there is no future life.
rible mistake this is, a fatal confusion of passions and pleasures with
happiness. The former are fleeting —the drunkard always has a hang-
this way, from desire to desire." Such a man will end his career "hav-
ing always imagined that he was going to be happy, and in truth, hav-
ing experienced only a tumultuous succession of pleasure and disgust,
desire and remorse." No, citizens, "happiness does not exist in
the new form of being that would replace the one he had lost. But this
I want to be above all adversity," will suffer no affliction. For the "man
who has made a sacrifice of himself" transcends "all accidents, all
trouble the human heart." Never does he lose himself to pride, ambi-
tion, avarice, or jealousy, and never does he chase after those fleeting
pleasures that reward us with only paltry satisfaction. The man who has
made a sacrifice of himself "lives entirely for the happiness of others,
finding his own felicity in the felicity of the public." He helps the un-
fortunate, the indigent, the suffering. He is a tender father, a faithful
with firmness, sure of his conscience, consoled by his good actions, cer-
tain that his death would be followed by the regret and affection of
posterity." This, Lequinio concluded, was the happy man, a man of
"virtue." All who searched for happiness in this way would "be sure to
find it." And for those who did not, may the "sacred love of the patrie . .
force every individual to take the only road that can lead them to the
260 Happiness
'r Irnttr ir In ftaarai n .Wm dri* Inmvn/' J it Jmrrit fmUifiu (+~ +L<—m. b .
•-•— - 4<S
on fairly solid ground if we said that they almost certainly would have
been perplexed — perplexed and more than a little disturbed. For it
was at precisely this time, and in precisely this place, from the bocages
of Brittany down to the marshes of the Vendee, that considerable
numbers of citizens began to take up arms in opposition to the Revo-
lution. Men like Lequinio —representatives-on-mission—had been
dispatched to suppress them with all necessary force to maintain the
Darrin M. McMahon 261
slain parents. 8
way? Forced marches they would have understood — also forced entry
ment of the present regime, the Constitution of June 24, 1793, took
that promise seriously. "The goal of society is common happiness," it
"
declared in its very first article: Le but de la societe est le bonheur commun"
How fitting that the Jacobins should make happiness a central con-
cern. "Occupy yourself uniquely with the happiness of a great people
262 Happiness
that would bring the year and this liturgical cycle to a close — the law
specified the celebration of a "festival of happiness." Monsieur A. P.
sical virtue of the ancient world. From the outset, the Revolution had
witnessed a self-conscious embrace of the style of the ancients.
But with the constitutional monarch deposed, the revolutionaries
were free to drape their republic in iconography unsullied by emperor
or king. With chariots and togas, Corinthian columns and laurel crowns,
new world by way of the old, reviving what was best in the simple,
unsullied spirit of antiquity. 13 As Saint-Just himself declared proudly
on a different occasion, "We have offered you the happiness of Sparta
and of Athens in their most glorious days; we have offered you the
happiness of virtue, comfort, and the mean; the happiness that is born
of the enjoyment of what one needs, without excess; we have offered
you a happiness of the hatred of tyranny, of the delights of a cottage
and of a fertile field tilled by your own hands. We have offered to the
neither Lequinio nor his Jacobin comrades would have denied the
influence of the ancient past on their modern idea of happiness. But
they certainly would have balked at the suggestion that Christianity,
too, was playing a shaping role. Yet how else are we to explain this
giving up his own life for the salvation of humankind? Proclaimed from
the pulpit, Lequinio's new man finds happiness in living "entirely for
the friend of the humble, the poor, the downcast, the meek. He feeds
those who hunger and thirst for righteousness. With his aid, and with
his might, the last shall be first, and the first shall be last.
a beast who chased, who pursued, one desire to the next, and who
arrived at death "having always imagined that he was going to be
happy," but in truth, having experienced only "a tumultuous succes-
sion of pleasure and disgust." Man, admittedly, might be a collection
264 Happiness
this same "false promise of eternal happiness in the future," was the
very basis on which he, like his Christian predecessors, justified the
need for the terrible sacrifices of the present. Lequinio looked forward
to a time when "all tyrannies will be annihilated and all hypocrisy will
disappear. All thrones will crumble, all limits be effaced"; a time, fi-
nally, "when humanity will live as a single family, in a world that is one
patrie^ All would be happy there, and the man who had made a sac-
rifice of himself could die content in the knowledge that his sacrifice
would be remembered in the "regrets and affections of posterity." 16
In the future, the redeemer would be redeemed. In the future, those
who did not see real happiness now could imagine its coming, take
comfort in its imminent arrival. Happy are those who believe but do
not see. No less than the Christian heaven, Lequinio's future was
founded on faith.
"transfer of sacrality" from God to the nation, the Old Regime to the
attempted to invest their creation with sacral status, to give their newly
baptized citizens a convincing sense of purpose, an end, a goal. For what,
finally, would give meaning to their lives when every Christian altar had
been overturned? The answer was the subject of Lequinio's sermon.
"The world is full of Christian ideas gone mad," G. K. Chesterton
once observed. It is worth thinking of modern happiness as one of
those ideas. 19
The heir to not only the metaphysics of the classical
world but to the promise of Christian salvation, happiness received
Christianity's legacy of universal hope, charging it with a powerful
democratic potential and missionary appeal. This appeal was all the
stronger for its deep ties to the past —even, or especially, when those
ties were not acknowledged as such. Did not Lequinio and his breth-
ren catch a glimpse of those ties as they stood at the pulpits of their
former churches, preaching sermons on the approaching rapture and
demanding self-sacrifice in the name of the "true happiness" to come?
For that matter, did not even the most radical materialists —La Mettrie,
Bentham, Sade —perceive in their ostensibly more profane happiness
of perpetual pleasure a strange secularization and coming to earth of
low and setting about the long task of reinvention that would take him
eventually to Newport, Rhode Island, as under-commissioner for com-
merce during the reign of Napoleon. Securing forgiveness for the crimes
he had committed during the Revolution, he spoke little of happiness.
And on the final decadi of the Year II (1794), no one seems to have spo-
ken of it at all. The festival of happiness would have to be postponed.
Yet the future, like human dreams, refused to disappear. Although
the French Revolution pointed out the tremendous dangers of at-
tempting to realize the reverie of happiness on earth, it did not dispel
the hope. Ever looming on the horizon, this hope bid not only the citi-
zens of France but the citizens of the modern Western world to walk
forward in its pursuit. In this respect, the postrevolutionary French
landscape more closely resembled that of other advanced nations in
Europe and the Americas than one might otherwise suppose. For
there, too, the happiness of the future was emerging as the great
ter world. And there, too, happiness could be seen as the object of
many eyes, part of the religions both civil and sacred that invested
earthly existence with significance, meaning, purpose, and hope. 21
This collective march toward happiness was not always forced, as
in the case of the French Revolution. And many, of their own volition,
way. But on the whole, the momentum of modern culture has been in
the direction of earthly content, accompanied by a steadily expanding
sense of prerogative, entitlement, means, and due. Do we not feel
today that all human beings, in the best of possible worlds, deserve to
be happy? In our lives and in our loves, in our work and in our play, in
sickness and in health, happiness draws with omnipresent force, a
force that is all the more compelling for our inability ever to clearly
conceive it, and its own protean power to shape itself in keeping with
our projected desires. As the philosopher Pascal Bruckner has aptly
observed, happiness has become the "sole horizon of our democracies,"
a vision that for many is the measure of all things. 22 Whereas for most
men and women at the dawn of the modern age, God was happiness,
happiness has since become our god.
In these respects, Saint-Just was not altogether mistaken when he
proclaimed the novelty of the idea of happiness as it emerged from an
Enlightened world. But precisely because it also carried with it ves-
tiges of the classical and Christian past, happiness was laden with tre-
As we shall see in the second half of this book, Lequinio and the
Jacobins were not alone in refusing to reduce happiness to the sum of
all pleasures, in believing with the faith of Rousseau that a higher
happiness could be had here on earth. That belief was a stubborn
and very modern — faith, but one that collided time and again with the
hard realities of life in the modern world. Even in those places like
the United States, where the pursuit of happiness was treated as an
individual responsibility and choice, the end could demand means that
You higher men, do learn this, joy wants eternity. Joy wants
the eternity of all things, wants deep, wants deep eternity.
Here the young officer resolved to conquer literary fame. Taking leave
of his regiment, he worked intensely, reading and writing for months.
And in August, he stormed the citadel, submitting an entry to a prize
essay competition sponsored by the Academy of Lyon. The question
272 Happiness
dence to the contrary. A note of gloom pervades the work. "When ennui
takes possession of a man's heart," Napoleon tells us, "sadness, black
melancholy, and despair will follow. If this state endures, he will give
himself to death." 1
Having already written a brief reflection on sui-
your heart." Stroll along the sea and watch the great orb plunge "into
the bosom of the infinite." "Melancholy will lead you, and you will
abandon yourself to it." Wander in the countryside and listen "to the
Darrin M. McMahon 273
But it was not enough to carry the colors at the Academy of Lyon. A
five-man panel deemed his efforts uninspired, with one judge dismiss-
ing them as "worse than mediocre." 5 Candidate #15's hopes of liter-
ary fame were routed. Years later, the wound of rejection had still not
entirely healed. When Talleyrand, that mischievous courtier, pre-
sented the emperor with a copy of his youthful manuscript, Napoleon
read only a few pages before casting it into the fire. So, it seems, did
the great man dispense with the illusions of youth.
Perhaps this is fitting, for as Hegel would later observe, it is not the
fate of world-historical individuals to experience "what is commonly
called happiness." 6 In Napoleon's case, this was not for lack of effort.
274 Happiness
ure —both to himself and to those he had led. "I have meant to
make France happy," he confessed before his generals at his surren-
der at Fontainebleau. "I have not succeeded. Events have turned
against me." 7
This was an egregious understatement. More properly speaking,
Napoleon had turned against events and, in doing so, had dragged his
countrymen and the whole of Europe into a series of futile wars respon-
sible for the suffering of millions. But then, it was always the way of this
dynamic man to act on a gigantic scale. In his struggle to achieve a hap-
Odes to Melancholy
"Ich weifi nicht, was soil'es bedeuten I Da/3 ich so traurigbtn. " ("I do not know
what this can mean, that I am so sad.") The line, often sung, set to
music by Liszt, Clara Schumann, and others, opens one of the most
famous of all German poems, Heinrich Heine's "Die Lorelei." The
literal translation in English fails to do it justice, but Mark Twain,
that painstaking student of what he called, with affection, "the awful
was both a journalist and a poet) and aesthetics (he was an admirer of
Romanticism and one of its sharpest critics). A student of Hegel and
a friend in Paris of Engels and Marx, Heine warned of communism's
future threat to the world. He was a conflicted soul; but perhaps for
It was Heine, along with the poet Jean-Paul Richter, who first in-
but used from the late seventeenth century in English, and from the
mid-eighteenth century in French, to describe listless sadness and
immobilizing despair. Ennui ("boredom," but with a more generally
depressive sense) also began in the eighteenth century to be associ-
ated with maladies of the soul. The French word quickly made the
rounds of Europe, where, by the end of the century of lights, it was
turning up in various tongues.
It can be argued, in fact, that the mal de Steele was in truth the maldes
deuxsieeles, the sickness of two centuries. 10 Making room for the latter
affection with an intensity that make Werther and Rousseau seem re-
strained. Consider Chateaubriand, weeping his way across Europe in
convulsive sobs. "Sorrow is my element," he writes at the turn of the
century. "I only discover myself when I am unhappy." 11 The French
Romantic Pierre-Simon Ballanche claimed in 1808, "Only sorrow mat-
ters in life, and there is no reality beyond tears." 12
Byron, a man so
Pierre-Paul Prud'hon, Study for Le Reve du Bonheur, 1819, Musee de Louvre, Paris.
filling his widely read works with the "stubborn, black, horrible, bar-
barous melancholy" that was an "eternal and inseparable" part of his
14
life. Nor were contemporaries immune to the attractions of the
Schlegel brothers, of Schiller, Holderlin, or the countless other Ger-
man chroniclers of the Zeitkrankheit, the "sickness of the time," for
whom happiness was "tepid water on the tongue." 15 They could not
resist Shelley, who lived, he felt, in an "age of despair," whose world
16
was "a dim vast vale of tears." Or Keats, who could "scarcely remem-
17
ber counting upon any Happiness" at all in his short, unhappy life.
And this is only the beginning of a list that could fill volumes. Why,
after the long age of Enlightenment, we must ask, this newfound will-
take a longer view. At a safe remove from Europe, the American Ralph
Waldo Emerson marveled that "history gave no intimation of any soci-
prosperity" and "general well-being." "Yet we are sad & they were
not. . . . Why should it be?" 22
The very framing of the question im-
Darrin M. McMahon 279
plied an answer: that the process of development bred its own discon-
tent. Greatly indebted to Rousseau's analysis of the paradox of cul-
tural progress, this line of inquiry enjoyed widespread currency among
analysts of the modern malaise. As one of their most forceful repre-
consists in this very ecstasy of suffering." That old flower, Heine ob-
served, was Catholic Christianity, and its latest bloom was Romanti-
24
cism, what he called the "Romantic school."
Heine restricted his comments exclusively to German Romanti-
cism —with its formal embrace of the poetry and culture of the Chris-
tian Middle Ages. But one can certainly detect a strong Christian
tained both cultural vitality and intellectual resonance well into the
twentieth century.
The flowerings of Romanticism took root in this soil. Which is not
to say that Romantics shared unreservedly in the orthodoxies of the
faith. There were those, to be sure, who succeeded in fully prostrat-
ing themselves before the altar. But far more common was the posi-
tion of Thomas Carlyle. The Scottish son of a Calvinist preacher, and
a leading proponent in England of German philosophy, Carlyle saw
much to admire in the Christian religion. Yet he recognized that how-
ever much one might desire it, the Enlightenment could not be un-
done. "The Mythus of the Christian Religion look[ed] not in the
eighteenth century as it did in the eighth," he observed in his first
Darrin M. McMahon 281
Mythus, in a new vehicle and vesture." Put another way, God must be
clothed anew. 26 This was the task of the times —
to find new forms to
the Scottish renegade was not alone. The attempt to fashion new spiri-
tual raiments for a post-Enlightened age — to make the supernatural
natural and the natural, supernatural, in Carlyle's celebrated phrase
282 Happiness
ing into personal merit and spiritual reward. Pain was transformative;
it was the way back to God.
As we have seen, the Reformation tended to mitigate the heroic
ing. But neither Calvin nor Luther ever supposed that pain could be
entirely abolished, or that this was even a reasonable goal. A necessary
concomitant of a fallen world, pain was a fact of existence to be ac-
cepted and borne —preferably with joy.
Darrin M. McMahon 283
lies exposed to the very charge that the Romantics themselves dra-
matized so effectively: that suffering is natural to the human condi-
tion. To pretend that it is otherwise —the result, merely, of ignorance
This was not merely a call to see the world with open eyes. Nor
was it a delight in suffering for suffering's sake. That embrace would
come later, with the rise, in the second half of the nineteenth cen-
tury, of Symbolist poetry and aesthetic Decadence. Whereas those
movements exuded lurid fascination with sickness and decay in their
own right, the Romantics' preoccupation with pain was meant to
serve a higher purpose. "Only in the knowledge" of the dangers that
face us, Schiller continued, only by confronting the suffering and
tragedy of life, could there be "salvation for us." Suffering was agate-
way to a richer life, a door that led to a fuller understanding of the
self and the world, a passage that opened out into the intensity of
human experience. "Do you not see how necessary a World of Pains
and troubles is to school an Intelligence and make it a soul?" Keats
32
asks in a famous letter to his brother. Rediscovering a truth long
close to the Christian sage, Keats understood that suffering was nec-
essary to educate the self, to make us more complete human beings.
Pain, in a word, was transformative. It humbled individual pride,
"
284 Happiness
romance and allure. They also gave it purpose. We might almost say,
in answer to Heine, that the meaning of the suffering of the age was
precisely the suffering to give it meaning. People of substance
suffered, as they should, for this was a proper response to the world
and a means to a higher end. The Romantics, in this respect, were
fitting heirs to the Christian tradition. Yet they were also, we should
not forget, children of the Enlightenment. And when such children
descended into the valley of darkness, they did so with the hope,
the faith, that they would find sunshine on the other side.
The Romantics had a term for this precious ascent: They called it
"joy."
Odes to Joy
Joy, a leading scholar has observed, "is a central and recurrent term
34
in the Romantic vocabulary 7.
Used at times synonymously with hap-
piness, but in possession of its own distinct sense, joy wells up from
within and rains down from above. It is the counterpoint to despair,
and often its bosom brother. Thus does Coleridge conceive of this
"strong music in the soul" that surges forth in the midst of one of his
greatest poems, "Dejection: An Ode":
both a force that pours down upon us and the precipitate of that power.
Joy is light, joy is glory, joy is reserved for the pure of heart. And when
its sweet music wafts through the soul, it transforms us, as it trans-
forms the world, making a new heaven and a new earth, wedding
Nature to the self.
the tradition of German idealist philosophy that derived from Kant (to
which Coleridge himself was greatly indebted), this new view presented
—
286 Happiness
countries. But more often than not, it was combined with a second as-
sumption: that there was more to the world than first met the eye.
gether all living things, a union and harmony that eluded both telescope
and mathematical formula, this "Nature," in Coleridge's conception, was
an underlying order that could not be seen, only intuited, felt, divined.
And here was the link to joy. For joy resulted from our ability to
connect with this larger order and force, to stray outside the confines
Pretty joy!
Sweet joy, but two days old.
man endowment. Yet virtually all agreed that we quickly fell from
this prelapsarian state. In his Philosophical Lectures, Coleridge indi-
cates why:
American Walt Whitman, who later best captures the highly personal
it is Happiness. 38
ied within. Yet on the other hand, this force simultaneously transcends
the self, rendering our individual concerns and private cares a poten-
tial barrier to fusion with the "form, union, plan" of the wider world.
At once a gateway and a closed door, the repository of memories of
childhood bliss and the home of present pain, the Romantic self be-
not to preach forth this same Higher that sages and martyrs,
the Poet and the Priest, in all times, have spoken and suf-
fered; bearing testimony, through life and through death, of
the Godlike that is in Man . . . ?
39
290 Happiness
involves great sacrifice and pain. But the burden is ours to bear and is
within who whispers to us daily, like the New Adam, of what we once
were and again might be? It is Wordsworth, above all, who underlines
the point in his Home at Grasmere, a work in which he chronicles a re-
turn, both literal and figurative, to his childhood dwelling. After a long
self along its divine path. The German painter Philipp Otto Runge
captures perfectly the prospect of swirling, mysterious joy to be had
when taken up in the arms of the infinite:
world, the mist rises in the valley and I throw myself in grass
There is, too, the way of love. "Wherein lies happiness?" Keats asks
in "Endymion." In that which beckons, he answers:
The most "self-destroying" of all the earthly elixirs, love has the power
to effect this transformation, to make "men's being mortal, immor-
tal." It is the "hope beyond the shadow of a dream."
To the mystical transports of love and the ecstatic swoon of nature
might be added the Romantics' enraptured fascination with earlier
at the final destination of joy — a joy that is more, that is, than an ephem-
eral glimpse, a fleeting moment, or a passing feeling. In their darker
figure eternally taking leave. But despite this knowledge, the hope, the
faith endures that joy — lasting joy —can transform our existence into
tingly Romantic —
when the final stunning chorus of Beethoven's
that
loving Father!
"Joy was never my thing, so I find his Ode to Joy banal, which
Beethoven can be when he tries to be happy. . .
." 48 This, at any rate,
was the judgment of the dour Swedish playwright August Strindberg,
writing in the second half of the nineteenth century. Setting aside
the struggle for joy, Strindberg focused on a rather different image
of the master composer: a copy of Beethoven's mask, originally cast
by the Viennese sculptor Franz Klein. Grim, taut, pockmarked, it hung
in Strindberg's Stockholm apartment, flanked by candles. The brow
furrowed and the jaw set in defiance, the mask captured —did it
not? —the deep metaphysical pain of a man whom fate had robbed of
his hearing and then tortured on the rack of his own brilliance. Seen
in this light, the image was an icon, the symbol par excellence of the
tragic intensity of the heroic artist, suffering unto death in a world of
pain.
Bonheur kept a copy on the wall of her studio, as if to defy her name,
a reminder of artistic angst. The Italian symbolist Gabriele d'Annunzio
crowned his with a wreath of laurels. And thousands more contem-
plated the apparently haunting image in music shops, antique stores,
and private homes across Europe in the nineteenth and early twenti-
eth centuries. To an age enthralled by the new "sciences" of physiog-
nomy and phrenology, the face was the mirror of the mind, just as the
eye was the lamp of the soul.
look of strained agitation that haunted his face was less the reflection
of a state of mind than the product of the procedure itself. As the plas-
Far too hard. Fortunately, Beethoven still had life to live. And though
he never secured the lasting happiness that he demands of his two
brothers near the end of the testament ("during my lifetime I have
thought often of you and ways to make you happy —be so"), Beethoven
did aspire throughout his career to the joy that animates the final
movement of his final symphony. 53 As much as melancholy, as much
as spleen, this search was an integral part of his life, as it was of the
wider enterprise of early Romanticism.
Why, then, did Strindberg choose to see only the scowl, dismissing
the search for happiness as unworthy of a serious artist? The answer
goes far beyond any personal peculiarities of vision. And though the
history of the creation of Beethoven in the image of a suffering hero is
a story unto itself, the immediate impetus in this case is clear enough.
image not only of Beethoven but of Romantic art in general and its
Frankfurt in 1860, the main themes are all present in a book pub-
lished in 1819, The World as Will and Representation (revised and ex-
panded in a second volume in 1844). Finally, and perhaps most
distinctly, Schopenhauer adopted a curiously benevolent attitude
toward religion, despite his own uncompromising atheism. Seeing in
Christianity important confirmation of his work, he also regarded the
Hindu Upanishads and the teachings of the Buddha with interest and
respect. He was among the first Western thinkers to engage seriously
with the philosophy of the East.
In all of these ways, Schopenhauer was a man apart. But it was above
all his temperament that set him at the greatest distance from those
who had come before. In the history of happiness, Schopenhauer is
good Being, but rather of a devil, who had summoned creatures into
existence in order to gloat over the sight of their anguish and agony." 55
A stint, largely against his wishes, as an employee in the family mer-
cantile business seems to have done little to improve his outlook, nor
did the death of his father, most probably by suicide in 1805. And
Schopenhauer's relationship with his mother was never good. In 1814
they broke definitively. He remained a lifelong bachelor, with notori-
the world will constantly remind us of this bitter truth through the
power of its pain, for "everything in life proclaims that earthly happi-
that never leaves us, just as the free man makes for himself an
58
idol in order to have a master.
300 Happiness
ing force that permeates all living things and animates the universe as
Lurking below the surface of our selves, just as it lurks below the sur-
face of the world, the will-to-life both guides and subverts our con-
60
come to clear consciousness." Of such repressed longings, the most
powerful is the "sexual impulse," what Schopenhauer considers the
"kernel of the will-to-live":
Darrin M. McMahon 301
is the cause of war and the aim and object of peace, the basis
of the serious and the aim of the joke, the inexhaustible
source of wit, the key to all hints and allusions, and the
meaning of all secret signs and suggestions. . . . This, however,
is the piquant element and the jest of the world, that the
principal concern of all men is pursued secretly. . . . Indeed,
we see it take its seat at every moment as the real and heredi-
61
tary lord of the world.
With good reason did Schopenhauer regularly assert that the genitals
isfaction in the world could suffice to still its craving, set a final goal to
62
its demand." The instant one desire is satisfied, it is replaced by
another in a process of continual striving whose consequences are
doubly catastrophic. In the first place, the restless activity of the will
guarantees conflict with others, whose desires cannot fail to clash with
our own. And in the second, it assures continual individual dissatis-
faction, for the pleasure of desire satisfied pales before the pain of
tive" and pleasure "negative," meaning that we feel the one as an in-
inborn, he says, because "it coincides with our existence itself," bound
up with the blind striving of the will-to-live, whose successive satis-
65
faction "is what we think of through the concept of happiness." For
Schopenhauer, however, it is clear that this concept is the greatest of
illusions, one that our experience of life will almost certainly dispel in
the end. And so he pours scorn on all who would perpetuate this illu-
Laughing with Voltaire at the claim that this is the "best of all
and that its general appraisal of "the vanity of all earthly happiness"
68
was entirely sound. In Schopenhauer's view, moreover, Christianity's
"true spirit and kernel" — its contempt for the world —was shared by
Brahmanism and Buddhism. He frequently noted their similarities,
304 Happiness
which is pain," for many go kicking and screaming to their death, still
73
under the spell of the will. But for the "fortunate," death can only
come as a relief, a final cessation. Theirs is a strange privilege indeed:
. . . the state of the gods; for that moment we are delivered from the
miserable pressure of the will. We celebrate the Sabbath of the penal
76
servitude of willing."
Schopenhauer believed that this state of momentary transcendence
was achievable in various media. But it was above all in music, he ar-
tion, pain, sorrow, horror, gaiety, merriment, or peace of mind, but joy,
pain, sorrow, horror, gaiety, merriment, peace of mind themselves, to a
complete obscurity, his fame began to grow in the 1850s, this theorist
the more so in that it bid its followers to retrace, by secular steps, the
Although reduced to rubble in World War II, the House of the Seces-
sion has been carefully restored. It serves today more or less as its
Darrin M. McMahon 307
work of art — in their own right. But when originally shown at the
critic Carl Schorske has observed, "If ever there was an example of
collective narcissism, this was it: artists (Secessionists) celebrating an
80
artist (Klinger), celebrating a hero of art (Beethoven)."
As stated in the exhibition's catalog, the aim of this exercise in col-
resented in the series of drawings along the left wall as the dream and
rapture of soaring women, the misery of weak humanity naked and
kneeling in supplication, and the paragon of Strength, heavily armed,
who takes up the "struggle for happiness."
Along the second, shorter wall stands a group of hostile forces: the
apelike giant Typhon, "against whom even gods fight in vain," and his
"Die Sehnsucht nach Gluck" (The Longing for Happiness). Detail of the
left panel of Gustav Klimt, Beethoven Frieze, Secession Building, Vienna.
Photo: Erich Lessing/Art Resource, NY.
and Death on one side, and Lust and Unchastity, Excess, and Gnaw-
ing Grief on the other. What is truly extraordinary, however, is that
the "longing for happiness and the wishes of mankind" do not engage
the hostile powers that block their path. Rather, they "fly over and
away" above them, transcending the need to enter into conflict at all.
Their resolution, in the third wall, is thus assured. "The longing for
pure joy, pure happiness, and pure love." There, a "choir of the angels
of paradise" sings from a slightly altered chorus of the "Ode to Joy":
The longing for happiness finds its resolution in the mystical, sen-
sual embrace of art.
Modern Life, who said, "The beautiful is neither more nor less than the
82
promise of happiness." In this sanctuary, Klimt has fulfilled that
promise, creating a realm of beauty that allows us to soar for a moment
above the struggles of daily life. In doing so, he was being true, if not
to Beethoven himself, who struggled until the end to believe in a "lov-
ing Father beyond the stars," then at least to the Beethoven formed
in the image of Schopenhauer. For Klimt, like so many of his genera-
tion, had steeped himself in this philosopher's work, especially as
summarized and interpreted in Richard Wagner's widely read essay,
"Beethoven," which Klimt knew well. Just as "Christianity stepped
forth amid the Roman civilisation of the universe," Wagner observes
a
310 Happiness
there, "so Music breaks forth from the chaos of modern civilisation.
ing and deeper truth. "Let anyone experience for himself how the
whole modern world of Appearance, which hems him in on every side
to his despair, melts suddenly to naught if he but hears the first few
84
bars of one of those godlike symphonies." Interpreting his hero in
these Schopenhauerian terms, Wagner hears in Beethoven's music the
striving of the will
— "a supernatural life, an agency now soothing, now
appalling, a pulse, a thrill, a throb of joy, of yearning, fearing, grief and
of man, reserving special animus for the Jews, who allegedly barred,
like Typhon, the way to the happiness of the German people. Klimt
never shared those thoughts, and indeed, whereas Wagner urged ac-
tive engagement in the world, foreseeing a central role for art in the
development of a "new religion" and a new, glorious Reich, Klimt with-
drew into the womb of his own creation. To flee the world into the
image of art, or to remake the world in art's image —both were Ro-
mantic fantasies, and they belied a common conviction: that the world,
to the naked eye, was not a happy place. The longing for joy, the hap-
different cast —men who on the surface, at least, seemed less suscep-
tible to the sickness of the age. Heirs to the liberalism of Locke and
proponents of the pursuit of happiness, they identified themselves as
stantly railed, even as they freely accepted their funds. It is true that
ties of the individual above all else, they maintained the sanctity of
civil society and defended the importance of the rule of law.
Despite these differences from their bohemian and revolutionary
opponents, heirs to the liberal tradition were forced, like them, to
engage continually with the legacy of the Enlightenment. Weighing
the evidence of its self-evident truths, they also pondered the prob-
lem of the pursuit of happiness, and as they did so, they struggled to
maintain their faith in the Enlightenment's central promise of re-
demption in the world, "the place where, in the end, / We find our
the year 1800, while Napoleon pondered power and the pursuit
In
of happiness, and the "Ode to Joy" was still unheard, a pamphlet
appeared in Dublin. Offered for a penny by William Watson of Capel-
Street ("Printer to the Cheap Repository for Religious and Moral
Tracts"), The Path to Riches and Happiness was a bargain by any stan-
dard, and it promised a huge reward: wealth and well-being, felicity
ers "wealth and happiness" at the close of his yearly reflections in Poor
Richard's Almanack, it is not at all clear that he saw a necessary connec-
tion between the two. Like Aristotle, Franklin certainly believed that
shave himself, and keep his Razor in order, you may contrib-
ute more to the Happiness of his Life than in giving him a
thousand Guineas. The Money may be soon spent, and the
Regret only remaining of having foolishly consum'd it. But in
"Who is rich?" Poor Richard asks on another occasion. "He that is con-
7
tent." By this calculation, the pursuit of happiness was a comparatively
straightforward affair that had little to do with the pursuit of wealth.
314 Happiness
Trivial Pursuits
Few words in American history are more familiar than the following
unalienable rights; that among these are life, liberty & the
pursuit of happiness.
long been a matter of dispute. Picking over the phrases after the fact,
6 WAITED 5T>tT£5
OF AHmCA. U A~~* <**r*, *+*~AL2
» il m 0i
i
Vtii «'*** T
j - i
*-• '-r*-±f** fmm»+m* .1
such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their safety 6c
of the day." The Declaration, he said, made one of many, and many of
one:
and spirit called for by the occasion. All its authority rests
the third term in the allegedly Lockean trilogy of "life, liberty, and
property." Clouding over the Founding Fathers' "real" intentions
the protection, it seems, of their own estates — happiness is thus
presented as an ideological smoke screen that obscures the deeper
interests of its materialist-minded proponents. In this interpretation,
in God. For Locke, the "gravitational" pull of happiness was the pull
of pleasure, and pleasure had as many sources as men had palates.
Some liked "luxury and debauchery," others "sobriety and riches"; still
others preferred glory, hunting, or study. What gives pleasure "to dif-
phrase. In the very same month that Jefferson labored over the draft of
the Declaration of Independence, the State of Virginia's Constitutional
318 Happiness
fellow Virginian a version of the draft, which Jefferson had in his pos-
session at the time of writing the Declaration of Independence. The
words are revealing:
All men are created equally free and independent, and have
certain inherent natural rights, of which they cannot, by any
compact, deprive or divest their posterity; among which are
the enjoyment of life and liberty, with the means of acquiring
and possessing property, and pursuing and obtaining happi-
ness and safety. 15
Here, the natural right to pursue happiness (and to obtain it) is bound
up not only with security, life, and liberty but also explicitly with
property. Even earlier, in his widely read Rights of the British Colonies
Asserted'and Proved (1 /'64) , James Otis had made a similar connection,
observing that the end of government is "to provide for the security,
the quiet, the happy enjoyment of life, liberty, and property." 16 Otis,
if not Locke, used the happy phrase, and it was picked up and employed
again in the Declaration of Colonial Rights and Grievances, endorsed
by the First Continental Congress on October 1, 1 774. Still later, when
James Madison proposed a series of amendments in the form of a Bill
and liberty, with the right of acquiring and using property, and
generally of pursuing and obtaining happiness and safety. 17
rians have rightly asked, if Jefferson had really intended the "pursuit of
happiness" to stand for "property" and nothing else, then why did he
not simply use the term as others before him had? And why, they specu-
late further, did Jefferson advise his friend, the Marquis de Lafayette,
to remove the inalienable right of property from the draft of the Decla-
ration of Rights that the Frenchman penned in 1 788?
In the face of such questions, it is tempting to conclude that if
has a Lockean origin at all, then its source must be the Essay Concern-
ing Human Understanding and not the Second Treatise of Government. "The
pursuit of happiness" would then best be rendered the "pursuit of
pleasure," which for Locke was simply an empirical description of a
truth about human nature. Property might legitimately draw us for-
ward. But so might many other things. The pleasures we chose to pur-
sue —and how—were ultimately a matter of taste. This "variety of
pursuits shews," Locke affirmed, "that every one does not place his
19
happiness in the same thing."
Given the widespread discussion of happiness in the age of En-
lightenment, however — say nothing of the tremendous breadth
to
320 Happiness
itself. In the English language of Locke, like that of Jefferson, the word
had a harder meaning than it does today. It retained, as the critic Gam-
Wills has pointed out, a close link with its cognates "prosecute" and
"persecute." leading Dr. Johnson to list the word in his eighteenth-
century Dictionary of the English Language as follows:
bears repeating:
Thomas Hobbes was more explicit when he claimed that the "felicity
of this life consisteth not in the repose of a mind satisfied." But Locke's
point was much the same. Like a clever man on the run. final felicity
the full satisfaction of desire —would always elude capture.
Darrin M. McMahon 321
fetched, it is worth recalling that there was strong precedent for pre-
tradition, the desire for happiness was a sign of our punishment, if also
to not chase desire anywhere it led, to resist our baser instincts and
the futile pursuit of "transient pleasure." Precisely because tomorrow
we would die —and then be judged—we could not always eat and drink
with abandon.
A great many men and women in eighteenth-century America
shared this general perspective. Desire without limits, they believed,
was dangerous, as was desire whose yearnings focused only on the self.
Like Locke, they looked to God for guidance in their pursuit. Thus, the
Presbyterian minister Robert Breck, for example, preaching in New
England in the 1720s, stressed repeatedly that "the surest way to ad-
Ease and the Like." But no less essential was the "morality" and "vir-
tue" taught by the Christian religion. "The firm Belief of such Things"
was "so essentially necessary to Social Happiness, that he deserves to
be an Enemy to mankind, who endeavours to weaken [them]." 23 Simi-
larly, Benjamin Lord, the Congregationalist pastor from Norwich who
baptized Benedict Arnold, preached on the subject "Religion and Gov-
ernment subsisting together in Society, [are] Necessary to their
24
Compleat Happiness and Safety." It was a common theme. If not all
agreed with the Harvard- educated pastor Samuel Dunbar, who declared
in 1760 that the "presence of God with his People" was "their only Safety
and Happiness," few denied the essential connection. 25
These are merely a handful of the hundreds of such sermons
preached over the course of the century that linked social welfare and
the pursuit of happiness to the pursuit of Christian ethics. Frequently,
they also invoked the example of ancient Israel in imitation of their
predecessors in seventeenth-century England. A fortunate people in
a blessed country was thus presented as God's children, led happily
forward in pursuit of the freedom and justice of the Promised Land.
In such accounts —and there were many— it was generally not forgot-
ten that the Promised Land was also a land of milk and honey, rich
and abundant in peace and prosperity. But whether invoking the ex-
ample of Israel or not, these writers invariably presented Christianity as
they agreed that to allege "God himself does not delight to see his
creatures happy" was blasphemous. Equally, they concurred that to
think of happiness without love of one's neighbor —without Christian
charity, denial, and constraint —was profane. 26
Darrin M. McMahon 323
the divinity of Christ, and looking skeptically on miracles and all other
supernatural additions to the creed. Like the English Unitarian Joseph
Priestley — a central figure of the English Enlightenment and long
Jefferson's friend —the author of the Declaration demanded that his
in common. Yet over the last thirty years, some of the leading voices in
30
Anglo-American history have argued, convincingly, that they do. Trac-
ing a consistent language of liberty that runs from the ancients to the
revival of classical thought in Renaissance Italy and on to the Atlantic
world of seventeenth-century Britain, these historians draw attention
to a "classical republican" tradition that had great influence in eigh-
pursue "happiness" in any way we saw fit. For the classical republican
public good (civic virtue). And from civic virtue emerged happiness,
both individual and social. Frequently demanding self-sacrifice, de-
nial, and pain, civic virtue had little to do with pleasure. In fact, in the
classical republican analysis, the happiness of modern societies was
gravely threatened by the egotism, luxury, and corruption that turned
individuals away from the pursuit of the larger social good. Private
took pleasure only in the public good. 31 But that he could at times
invoke classical republican themes is without question. The two
traditions —and the two conceptions of happiness—most likely co-
of the day, helping to ensure that Lockean pleasure was tempered and
controlled by a strong dose of public virtue.
what enlightened men and women wanted to hear: Virtue was plea-
surable; pleasure was virtuous; and human beings were naturally so-
Perceptive critics have made the case that this benevolent concep-
tion of the "pursuit of happiness" lay at the heart of Jefferson's under-
standing of the term. 34 It is likely that they have pushed their case
too far, but in doing so they have also shown what is now difficult to
The words are those of two men whose work was well known to
Jefferson, and whose fate was also bound up closely with 1776: David
Hume, who died in that year, and his close friend Adam Smith, who
published in that year The Wealth ofNations, a work that Jefferson would
later desribe as the single greatest work on political economy. 35 Central
figures of the Scottish Enlightenment trained in moral philosophy,
both men were friends of Francis Hutcheson and were deeply affected
by his work. Smith studied with Hutcheson at Glasgow before going
up to Oxford, and Hume was prompted to write to the older moralist
early in his career, seeking wisdom. "For pray what is the end of Man?"
Hume inquired. "Is he created for Happiness? For this life or the next?
For himself or his Maker?" 36 Puzzling over such questions throughout
his life, Hume was at times given to melancholy and doubt, plagued
by his inability to arrive at certain truth. But on such occasions, he
turned, as he tells us in his first work, A Treatise of Human Nature, to a
powerful antidote:
By throwing himself into the "action and employment and the occu-
pations of common life," Hume declared elsewhere, he was able to
find respite from the riddles of existence. 38
isfy our passions, reason searched out new ways to fulfill our desires.
It was, Hume famously observed, passion's slave, toiling in the service
of greater comfort and fulfillment. What Locke had identified as the
ceaseless striving of pursuit —the movement from uneasiness to plea-
sure to uneasiness — Hume validated as the motor of civilization, driv-
1770s. 41 With even greater precision than Hume, Smith detailed the
manner by which human beings' mistaken belief — their illusion — that
ness and tranquility of his situation." "Enchanted with the distant idea
of this felicity," he works around the clock in "the pursuit of wealth
and greatness," his eyes ever on his prize:
artificial and elegant repose which he may never arrive at, for
invent and improve all the sciences and arts . . . which have entirely
changed the face of the globe. . .
." This "deception" drove the steady
advance of civilization and the expansion of prosperity that in Smith's
330 Happiness
was to Cicero, the statement captures well what few, if any, of the
Founding Fathers would have denied. Endorsed by the principal au-
ordered arrangement of desire were indeed the way to that end. But
whether the goal itself could be fulfilled depended on individual de-
cision and choice; happiness could never be imposed. And in that
vidual interest and the greater good, private and public happiness,
could be reconciled. This faith was by no means blind, resting as it
Strange Melancholy
it in the first place was real enough. As the late historian Howard
Mumford Jones has shown, Americans took great pains to register such
complaints in the nineteenth century, filing hundreds of lawsuits in
state and federal courts that accused their governments and fellow
citizens alike of impeding their sacred right to happiness. 51 Despite
cruel war against human nature itself, violating its most sacred
rights of life and liberty in the persons of a distant people who
never offended him, captivating & carrying them into slavery
phrase that all are created equal, endowed by their creator with cer-
tain unalienable rights.
Darrin M. McMahon 333
the history of the pursuit of equality and freedom — the slow, ever
never stop thinking of the good things they have not got. 53
When one passes from a free country into another which is not
so, the contrast is very striking: there, all is activity and
bustle; here all seems calm and immobile. In the former,
betterment and progress are the questions of the day; in the
From a world in which the inhabitants have little but expect nothing,
a world in which the people are relatively content because their needs
are few, one passes to the frenetic tumult of modern America. Here
the hopes of infinitely expanding desire are turned loose with aston-
ishing force. "No one could work harder to be happy," Tocqueville
observes of Americans, marveling at the ceaseless, restless energy they
expend in search of a better life. 55 Rushing from one thing to the next,
an American will travel hundreds of miles in a day. He will build a
house in which to pass his old age and then sell it before the roof is
on. He will continually change paths "for fear of missing the shortest
cut leading to happiness." Finally, though,
America, that source had been tapped directly, owing to the country's
unique social and political makeup, pumped furiously by its growing
equality. When "distinctions of rank are blurred and privileges abol-
ished," Tocqueville grasped, "when patrimonies are divided up and
336 Happiness
land of opportunity, the New World of milk and honey, "the taste for
physical pleasures" was the primary cause of American restlessness. 59
more or less level, the slightest variation is noticed." The "more equal
men are," Tocqueville concluded, "the more insatiable will be their
longing for equality." Striving ever to match their fellow citizens, and
enticed always by the imminent possibility of a better life, Americans
pursued an elusive equality with the same dogged futility with which
they pursued happiness:
enough to know its charms, but they do not get near enough
to enjoy it, and they will be dead before they have fully
61
relished its delights.
And that, Tocqueville concluded in a famous line, "is the reason for
the strange melancholy often haunting inhabitants of democracies in
the midst of abundance, and of that disgust with life sometimes grip-
62
ping them in calm and easy circumstances."
If one were to turn away from the text at this point, it would be
tempting to conclude that Tocqueville saw more frown than smile on
the face of humanity's future. But open-eyed though he was, Tocque-
ville was also cautiously optimistic — a realist but not a pessimist. At first
The novelty of America, in other words, lay not in the perennially rest-
less pursuit of happiness, but in the extension of that pursuit to an
entire culture on a scale hitherto unknown. And though that presented
its own set of challenges, it also suggested that America might draw
solace from the collected wisdom of the ages.
There were encouraging signs that American culture so far had
been able to do just that, maintaining values that served as an
antidote to the insatiable striving of desire, curbing the potential
338 Happiness
>,..-
B. Johnson, The Paths of Life, 1805, Courtesy of Map Collection, Yale University
Library. The circuitous paths of this amusing document lead to such dead-ends as
"Haughty Hill," "Weeping Shade," "Faltering Alley," and "Gambler's Hold." The
successful traveler on life's way arrives at "Happy Old Age Hall" (bottom left).
the whole of man's imagination; the incomplete joys of this world will
never satisfy his heart." "Incredulity is an accident; faith is the only
67
permanent state of mankind."
340 Happiness
sublunary disposition. Whereas Old World priests had once spoken "of
nothing but the other life" and "hardly took any trouble to prove that
Indeed they find it difficult to take their eyes off it. The
better to touch their hearers, they are forever pointing out
how religious beliefs favor freedom and public order, and it is
danger that in the end he may lose the use of his sublimest faculties
and that ... he may at length degrade himself if not restrained. That,
Tocqueville believed, was the great "peril" of democratic nations. And
Darrin M. McMahon 341
given that the "passion for physical pleasures . . . can never satisfy a
whole people" any more than it can permanently satisfy a man, then
what was true of individuals was also true of the nation writ large: "In
The spirit of religion provided the will for that resistance, the force
to restrain oneself, and the impetus to act in the service of others. It
also turned our thoughts toward the future, imbuing us with constancy
and hope —an effect, Tocqueville observes, that works "as much in
way would not only impoverish all who engaged in the chase but con-
tinually frustrate their ability to reach their goal. Only by harnessing
desire with healthy restraints could Americans learn to live within
their ever expanding means.
The tools to accomplish this task, on the other hand, were already
in place, a legacy of the society that had produced the Founding Fa-
thers and their original dreams of pursuit. But whether the spirit of
religion and the publicly oriented spirit of self-interest rightly under-
stood would continue to work for the future was uncertain. In his
darker moments, Tocqueville conceded, "No power on earth can pre-
vent increasing equality from . . . disposing each citizen to get wrapped
up in himself." 71 The potential consequences of this development
were disturbing.
342 Happiness
worth repeating them here, for in effect they address a central ques-
tion raised by the classical liberal experiment. "Is it so evident," he
The goal of liberalism, in Constant's view, was not happiness but the
development of the individual, an end for which political liberty was
the ultimate means. That such liberty would include the liberty to
go awry — to make poor choices, to make a mess of one's life, to make
oneself sad —Constant freely acknowledged. He also entertained
openly what others since have often been reluctant to face: the pos-
sibility that liberty's greatest product might not be happiness, but
on the contrary, that "noble disquiet which pursues and torments us"
to the grave, the possibility, in short, that liberty and happiness might
be in tension, or even at odds.
A Crisis of Faith
"M. de Tocqueville's is, in our eyes, the true view of the position in
which mankind now stand." So observed John Stuart Mill in a glow-
344 Happiness
On the face of things, this was an altogether happy prospect. Yet like
Tocqueville, Mill regarded the future with a furrowed brow, worrying
that an increase in aggregate happiness might be offset by a rise in indi-
tures —and thus the true source of the strange restlessness in the
Darrin M. McMahon 345
Mill's warnings are particularly worthy of note. For not only was he
one of the most discerning critical defenders of classical liberalism, he
was also deeply interested in happiness. On the face of things, this,
too, might seem a happy match. But the reality, as Mill came to par-
rian age
—"one of the very few examples . . . of one who has, not thrown
77
off religious belief, but never had it."
Mill claims never to have felt the lack, and yet it is striking to listen
to his own account of the response to his first serious engagement with
the writings of Bentham, read, oddly, in French translation while he
was abroad in his early teens. As Mill tells us in his wonderfully candid
Autobiography,
When I laid down the last volume ... I had become a differ-
Mill, by his own admission, had come into the fullness of faith, find-
ing "religion," a "creed," and an "object in life" with which his "own
79
conception of happiness was entirely identified." It is all the more
poignant that he would come to doubt his faith, perhaps to lose it
entirely.
the primary cause, the effect, quite clearly, was shattering. "I was ac-
It was the autumn of 1826, and Mill had fallen into "a dull state of
nerves," growing listless and indifferent, similar to that state "in which
converts to Methodism usually are, when smitten by their first 'con-
whether, if all his goals in life could be realized, if all his dreams of
reform and progress could be carried out, this would be "a great joy
and happiness" to him. He was forced to admit that it would not. At
this point, he says:
been found in the continual pursuit of this end. The end had
ceased to charm, and how could there ever again be any inter-
est in the means? I seemed to have nothing left to live for. 81
opinion and character. The first was to impress upon him the impor-
tance of the "internal culture of the individual," forcing him to think
ing. Arguably, Mill never fully recovered his old faith in happiness, de-
spite his claims to the contrary.
the test of all rules of conduct, and the end of life. But I now
thought that this end was only to be attained by not making it
the direct end. Those only are happy (I thought) who have
348 Happiness
their minds fixed on some object other than their own happi-
ness; on the happiness of others, on the improvement of
mankind, even on some art or pursuit, followed not as a
means, but as itself an ideal end. Aiming thus at something
else, they find happiness by the way. . . . Ask yourself whether
you are happy, and you cease to be so. The only chance is to
This is an insight that Hume certainly possessed and that in key re-
does he reveal that "the only chance" for happiness is to treat some
Mill's life, drafted in the 1850s, amended in the 1860s, and published
in 1873, the year of his death. But they are not the only instance of
such revealing avowal. Mill's essay "Bentham," written several years
after its subject's death and published in the London and Westminster
Review in 1838, contains the following damning reflection:
Again, the judgment may be valid on its own terms, but as the great
historian of ideas Isaiah Berlin once observed, it destroys "at one blow
Darrin M. McMahon 349
the proudest claim, and indeed the central doctrine, of the Benthamite
system" — that happiness (utility or pleasure) can be used as a valid
But what might those be? What, to return to the question posed in
essential to the very idea of moral philosophy; is, in fact, what renders
88
argument or discussion on moral questions possible." What end, or
ends, would take the place of happiness for the salvation of moral
philosophy?
Throughout the body of his work, Mill considers various candidates:
justice, dignity, love, independence, diversity, self-sacrifice, beauty,
and liberty, among them. But whether these are to be considered final
ciple. . . . That principle is that the sole end for which mankind
are warranted, individually or collectively, in interfering with
in the tradition of those, like Constant and Tocqueville, for whom lib-
erty was the indispensable good, vital to human dignity, nobility, and
development. Was this, then, the "other end" to which Mill had re-
ferred in his Autobiography as the "only chance" — the end external to
happiness that, when treated as the purpose of life, might bring it "by
the way," as an ancillary effect?
Mill speaks often as if that were the case, invoking liberty —of con-
science, of assembly, and, most critically, of "tastes and pursuits, of
framing the plan of our life to suit our own character" — as a vital foun-
dation for happiness and one of its necessary conditions. On the two
other occasions in On Liberty in which he invokes happiness, he does
so precisely in that connection, speaking of an individual's ability to
define his own conduct through his own character as one "of the prin-
cipal ingredients of happiness" and observing later that where the full
Darrin M. McMahon 351
a throwing off of the stifling constraints that stand in the way of self-
352 Happiness
this process, the culprit was less the lingering Calvinist spirit than the
nature of modern civilization itself, with an all-consuming commer-
cial capitalism and middle-class democracy as its defining features. What
Mill had described in his review of Democracy in America as the "growing
warns, "to see that it is good there should be difference, even though not
"
for the better, even though, as it may appear to them, some should befor the worse,
then individuality will be doomed. 95
And here we arrive at the center of a key tension in Mill's thought.
Mill sought bravely to deny this, arguing instead that the pursuit
of liberty could be that "other end" that would deliver happiness
indirectly, by the way. By this route might others avoid the paradox
that Mill himself had experienced with so much pain: that of making
happiness the direct object of his existence — the aim of his pursuit
and in so doing stifling his true character and killing the thing he loved.
Mill's warning bears serious reflection — as much for entire societ-
does not follow that in serving as a final end, liberty can or should also
Darrin M. McMahon 353
ety, we might even say a better society. But whether this would be a
happier society as well is not easy to say. One man's "liberation," alas,
own right. But his belief, his faith, that this precious end would in turn
There is another thought, in many ways more troubling still: that the
and Socratic delights. This was a thought that the likes of John Stuart
from suffering and perhaps to begin a better life. They put faith in
354 Happiness
Edmund Youngbauer, Die Jagd nach dem Gliick (Chasing After Happiness), late
stretches at a time.
The prospect of a trip had lifted Weber's spirits, allowing him to
return to his desk to complete the first half of the book that would
make him famous. The journey itself completed the therapy. After
three and a half months of intense travel in the United States, Weber
returned to Germany to finish The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capi-
Darrin M. McMahon 355
What was the source of this all-consuming culture, the "spirit" that
lay at its heart? Weber's answer is famously contested, and it hinged
on a connection with religion. In the Protestant anxiety over the fate
ther. This despite the fact that Franklin himself, in Weber's view, was
98
a "colourless deist." The label should give us pause, for it is a singu-
one were to pose the question "What is the meaning of their restless
activity?" to ask why they are "never satisfied with what they have,"
these people would tell you that they work to provide for their pos-
terity, or more often and "more correctly" that "business with its
There was, however, another motivation, one that was also a hold-
over from an earlier ethic, but one that Weber's account may have
prevented him from seeing. Although Franklin did distinguish the
pursuit of happiness from the pursuit of wealth, he rarely shunned the
"enjoyment of life," and it is unlikely that he considered the accumu-
lation of fortune as completely devoid of eudaemonistic or hedonistic
"admixture." What is true of Franklin is even more true for the many
who came after— the millions, like Weber himself, who arrived on
America's shores fleeing Old World pain for New World delight. As
Adam Smith had anticipated, and Tocqueville and Mill had confirmed,
a great many of these men and women believed that the pursuit of hap-
piness and the pursuit of wealth were one, regardless of the veracity
(or the rationality) of their faith. And they often sought nothing more
than the freedom to pursue their happiness accordingly, making a
better life for themselves and their families, while enjoying a few of
the fruits of their toil along the way. This may not have been mud
far from it — but it also fell well short of the lofty heights of self-
a house and a few luxuries, a picket fence, a faithful spouse, and a de-
102
cent suit of clothes. Philosophers like Mill might disparage such
middle-class aspirations. But they were not ignoble dreams.
358 Happiness
ing a justification for work and sacrifice, a basis for meaning and hope
that only loomed larger on the horizon of Western democracies. In-
deed, it was during the very period when Weber was writing that
America, and the West more generally, began to undergo what the
sociologist Daniel Bell has described as a monumental transformation,
"the shift from production to consumption as the fulcrum of capital-
ism." Bringing "silk stockings to shop girls" and "luxury to the masses,"
this transformation made of "marketing and hedonism" the "motor
forces of capitalism," driving over all restraints that stood in the way
of the enjoyment of material pleasures with a momentum that would
104
have surprised even Tocqueville. As inhibitions of desire were
thrust aside, and as opportunities for satisfaction grew, "economic
growth," Bell observes, became "the secular religion of advancing in-
dustrial societies: the source of individual motivation, the basis of
one point they lay on the shoulders of the saint "like a light cloak,
which can be thrown aside at any moment," that cloak had since be-
come "an iron cage" from which "the spirit of religious asceticism had
escaped," heavy and perhaps immovable, pinning us to earth. 106 Weber
failed to detect the pursuit of happiness in this confining space, but
the failure may have been willed. Scoffing at "optimistic dreams of
happiness" and at politics based on its pursuit as "flabby eudaimon-
ism," he granted no place in his political economy for these mundane
107
quests. As he emphasized in a speech delivered in 1894:
In so stating the aim of politics this way, Weber added his own voice to
pears to me much more idealistic" than the striving for a positive feel-
ing of happiness. For the tragic truth of the matter was that the "feeling
360 Happiness
believed, still clung to the "illusion" that science in any of its forms
whether social or natural —could provide certain answers to the most
pressing of human questions: What shall we do and how shall we live?
This, of course, had been the basic question of the Greeks. But
after centuries of struggling to provide a definitive answer, it was
time to acknowledge that science could no more provide that answer
than it could reveal "the 'way to true being,' the 'way to true art,'
the 'way to true nature,' the 'way to true God,' [or] the 'way to true
110
happiness.'"
That Weber considered the "way to true happiness" the last of
these "former illusions," the one that succeeded the place of God, is
wealth and comfort alone could bring them what they want? Was there
not a danger that in pursuing their elusive happiness, they would lead
themselves and their fellow men astray?
Darrin M. McMahon 361
This was the same thought that had given Rousseau such pause.
We yearned for what our neighbor had — fine clothes, trinkets and
baubles, a more splendid house —and chased what our neighbor
chased, not because these things contributed to our genuine happi-
ness, but because we believed that they would. The desires of men in
sires with genuine needs. The same "deception" that Smith saw as
the engine of growth in commercial societies was, for Rousseau, the
cause of human pain.
nineteenth-century London:
the same way, by the same means? And still they crowd by
one another as though they had nothing in common, nothing
112
to do with one another. . . ,
dividuals away from their petty pursuits and toward their common
deliverance.
Building
happy worlds
A A well, not yet two centuries old in the world." The claim was 1
that of Thomas Carlyle, who borrowed the line from a pillar of the
Enlightenment, the poet Alexander Pope. Carlyle's chronology was
nearly flawless (he wrote in the 1840s). And with regard to the dra-
matic transformation that this new idea was working in the world, the
irascible Scot was equally astute. As he observed in the ironically en-
Every pitifulest whipster that walks within a skin has had his
head filled with the notion that he is, shall be, or by all
human and divine laws ought to be, "happy." His wishes, the
pitifulest whipster's, are to be fulfilled for him; his days, the
pitifulest whipster's, are to flow on in ever-gentle current of
A Romantic at heart, he was also skeptical of the very notion that hap-
piness could be provided by pleasure alone, delivered on demand in
Carlyle challenged, compare past and present, and one would gain
insight into this pressing question. A close-knit community, purpose-
ful labor, a sense of God — these were the necessary requisites so evi-
dent in the England of the Middle Ages but so lacking in the world of
today. If the power of industry had created vast wealth, which bulged
in the pockets of the few, the many toiled as lifeless drones, chasing
of Mammon denied the greatest human need: for God, or the godlike
in man. "God's Laws are become a Greatest Happiness Principle,"
of human beings. But how to provide those things, Carlyle did not
really know. Like others of his century, he was inclined to look nostal-
gically to the past. Yet he also knew that there could be no simple
return to simpler times. He spoke vaguely of the coming of new "he-
roes," of building a "true aristocracy," of giving religion new clothes.
But his was a protest not a plan of action, a reckoning with past and
present not with the future.
Reviewing the work in the year after its publication, Friedrich
Engels found much in it to applaud. "Of all the fat books and thin
pamphlets which have appeared in England in the past year .
," Karl
.
.
Marx's lifelong collaborator observed, this "is the only one which is
Engels's close agreement with Carlyle does not end there. Despite
his recognition that the Scottish critic was hardly a socialist, he looked
with favor on his proposition that an "endless significance lies in work,"
that "labour is life," that "all true work is sacred." "Blessed is he who
has found his work; let him ask no other blessedness," Carlyle observes
in a modern beatitude that Engels cites with approval. 10 He whole-
heartedly agrees that it is in community alone that one can find one's
way. And he shares the conviction that in the past lies the key to
the understanding of human destiny. Only on the subject of religion
does Engels take pains to distinguish his views from Carlyle's largely
German-inspired idealism. Yet even here, Engels the radical un-
believer shows a surprising indulgence:
the riddle of humanity that Carlyle had affirmed contained the "secret
of all unhappy men and unhappy nations." "Happy is the man who
answers it aright," Engels observes. 12
He would deliver that answer.
all time. With his protean powers, his knowledge and science, his tech-
— the
that story of Marx and Engels's solution of the
story of riddle
fered a course at the University of Berlin at the same time as his rival,
tan had been extolled "as the greatest of philosophers so loudly that
the echo was heard throughout Europe." 16 As a leading modern com-
mentator has observed, with the possible exception of Marx, "no phi-
losopher of the nineteenth or twentieth centuries has had as great an
impact on the world as Hegel." 17
Why this tremendous influence? Although the answers to that ques-
tion are necessarily many and complex, one essential clue can be
found in the section from the Phenomenology of Mind referred to above.
Strictly speaking, "unhappy consciousness" {ungluckliches Bewusstsein)
was Hegel's term for a way of looking at the world that had been
Darrin M. McMahon 369
In many respects this analysis was not original. Saints Paul and
Augustine never spoke, precisely, of the "unhappy consciousness" or
invoked Hegel's other term, "the alienated soul," but it is clear that
conflict with themselves and with each other: Happiness was not in
their constitutions.
tion of world history. True, all hitherto existing ages had known forms
of what Hegel called "alienation" or "estrangement" (Entfremdung or
Entausserung) a profound sense of being sundered from one's environ-
,
ment, one's fellows, and one's self. But to the close student of world
history, it became apparent that the forms of human alienation devel-
oped progressively over time, evolving in keeping with different his-
past.
sacrifice.
19
But looking forward, it became clear that men and women
would not have suffered in vain. For this same process of creative
destruction was leading humanity ever closer to its final realization,
themselves.
A necessary corollary to this process was that men and women would
cease to experience desire "inauthentically" in a manner not purely
consonant with their own true needs. Like Rousseau, Hegel appreci-
ated quite early on that in modern commercial societies, individuals'
desires and needs were generated by the desires and needs of others.
Implanted by advertising, dictated by fashion, and determined by style,
vidual desires would still be shaped by social forces, but now each mem-
ber of the community would truly want just what was of genuine service
to the community as a whole. In turn, the community would look after
each of its members like integral parts of a body, perfectly articulating
their separate needs. In such a state, the conflict between freedom and
necessity would cease to exist. All would want only what they should
want; all would want only what they needed.
It has often been remarked —and with reason— that Hegel's vision
of the triumph of Freedom is not only Utopian but also potentially dan-
gerous in its obliteration of the distinction between the individual and
society. This would seem even more the case when one considers the
nature of the force guiding this great world-historical deliverance.
Hegel gave it different names at different times. He called it "Idea."
He called it "Reason." He called it "Spirit." He called it "God." And
whatever else one might say about the complicated religious views of
that his use of the divine epithet in this instance was not wholly mis-
placed. For his was a system that gave logic, direction, and purpose to
cation for the pain of the past and the promise of future redemption,
Hegel's system gave reason to unhappiness and offered hope that it
Darrin M. McMahon 373
would one day be brought to an end. This, in large measure, was the
secret of its success.
ing sun. But whereas Hegel was content to speak in the abstractions
No-Place Is Someplace
Latter-day Saints (the Mormons) for the sin of having chosen this
Mississippi port city as their Zion — the designation was more unlikely
still. Undaunted, several hundred "New Icarian" socialists arrived in
and workers, for the most part, they had recently fled the urban squalor,
political repression, and economic uncertainties of an industrializing
Europe. Lured from the Old World by the promise of freedom and fer-
tile lands in the New, they had arrived initially in Texas intent on build-
ing there the "New Icaria," the ideal city described by their visionary
leader, the Frenchman Etienne Cabet, in his Utopian tract Voyage en Icarie
(1840). In Texas, they would put an end to social strife, while putting
VOYAGE
ICARIE
M. CABET.
FRATERMTE
9
SOUUTI
.'I DIP.
his followers were ready to sue him for fraud. Somehow, with blandish-
ments and persuasion, the charismatic leader succeeded in rallying their
spirits and assuring them that all would be well. He recalled the chant
they had sung on the decks as their ship sailed from Le Havre:
Soldiers of Fraternity,
Let us go to found in Icaria,
ties left behind by the Mormons, the site was well suited for an ex-
periment in communal living. It was also cheap. And so, somewhat
bedraggled, with funds already waning but enthusiasm still high,
Cabet and company set about creating a happy world in Illinois based
on fellowship, sexual equality, and common ownership.
The experiment proved short-lived. Within scarcely a year, a tornado
had decimated the once spectacular Mormon temple, fires had razed
the stables and windmill, and a cholera epidemic had carried off twenty
settlers. Financial constraints forced the community to rely on the sale
ing workers' orchestra, free education, and the partial integration of the
sexes —by 1856 the community had split into two factions, with the
majority burning Cabet in effigy and banishing him from Icaria. He
would die later that year in St. Louis, broken, lonely, and depressed. The
"happiness of Humanity," clearly, was not yet at hand.
The story of the Icarian settlement in Nauvoo, at once tragic and
darkly comic, is symbolic of the wider fate of the so-called Utopian
socialist movements of the first half of the nineteenth century. Like
Cabet's Icarians, the followers of such men as Robert Owen ( 1 771—
1858), Charles Fourier (1772-1837), and Henri de Saint-Simon
(1760-1825) attempted to build model communities in Europe and
America, squatting on ground once occupied by Christians. They ul-
in textiles. The word "happiness" was never far from his lips. Whether
pursuing practical reforms for his workers at his model factory in New
Lanark, Scotland, penning treatises on perfect communities, or at-
tempting to create such communities in England or America, Owen
sought always to promote the greatest good of the greatest number.
In the process, he went far beyond anything Bentham had ever con-
sidered, dreaming of a:
own happiness, for that of his family, and for that of humanity." 27 Born
a count, he had fought with French forces in the American Revolu-
tionary War, joining Washington at the Battle of Yorktown. He was
later taken prisoner by the British in the West Indies. During France's
own Revolution, Saint-Simon made a fortune speculating in confis-
cated real estate (he was even rumored to have tried to buy Notre
Dame Cathedral) but was then imprisoned by the Jacobins and sub-
sequently lost everything he had through the treachery of a business
partner and his own extravagance. In the decades that followed, Saint-
Simon survived a suicide attempt, a stint in a madhouse, and visita-
maids, cooks, and the like, all working for all (when they
please). Elegance and luxury will be had by everyone. The
Phalanx will be devoted to the service of useful labor, of the
Fourier's writings are replete with such bold speculations, laid out in
arts in the service of the masses. Fourier retained a place for private
ambition, touch, taste, and the like —given ample room to play. In
A large part of the appeal of the Utopian socialists, in fact, was their
man and class against class, while Fourier railed against "industrial
THE CRISIS.
THE CRTSI8; OR TBS < If
/ta.**^,.. i i i ) 1'iir
.^^,,.p.-„>,la..w,.ii„. *h.W»
••»] aa -« nn 1 !•
ffc.. ***.*.!...**— <tj<m»«l-*i- feioanst 1 - -«- «M J— w-.,, -,,
ram*. «4 t. «rm « t* r~« <=«»< < •- -—" "* *•"* '»*" —' «~" «•»»
Do away with the sources of misery, and happiness would follow natu-
rally on its own.
Such observations give credence to a point later made by George
Orwell: "Nearly all creators of Utopia have resembled the man who has
toothache, and therefore thinks happiness consists in not having
toothache." 34 They also follow logically from Enlightenment assump-
tions, which tended, as we have seen, to present happiness as a natu-
ral condition and course. Happiness, in the Enlightened view, was
impeded only by pain-inducing prejudice, practice, and false belief.
cantly from what had come before. In the first place, whereas Enlight-
enment theorists and their liberal successors tended to conceive of
382 Happiness
none could be happy. The sight of suffering of even a few was a re-
buke to the many.
This emphasis on the complete and total extension of happiness
with its attendant appeal to the least fortunate members of society
tive cultural
—
wholeness "organic ages" — such the ancient world
as
or medieval Christendom, giving way, in turn, to "critical ages," in
which the norms and beliefs that had made sense in a given epoch were
called into question and eventually succumbed to the creative de-
struction of the new. The present period —encompassing the whole
of the upheavals of the Enlightenment and the French Revolution
Darrin M. McMahon 383
was just such a critical age, an age of transition. But it was already giv-
ing birth to a new organic age that, in Saint-Simon's view, would mark
the end of this long historical cycle of creation and destruction. The
final age would not only be organic, it would be golden.
Fourier also envisioned history as a continual oscillation between
periods of "harmony" and periods of "social chaos," agreeing that a new
dawn of happiness was on the horizon, even if it was still hard for many
to see. "Beset by long-standing misfortunes and bound by the chains
of habit," people still imagined that they were destined "to a life of
privations." It would "take some time for them to become accustomed
37
to the idea of happiness that awaits them." Dawn, nonetheless, was
breaking. When Robert Owen waxed lyrical on the approaching "ter-
restrial paradise," he spoke for all Utopians. "The period for introduc-
ing the Rational System, for remodeling the character of man, and for
The very term that Owen used to describe this coming dawn
"terrestrial paradise" — is indicative of one other distinctive feature
of this early Utopian socialism: its self-conscious religiosity. It is true
that Owen liked to portray himself as an heir to the freethinking,
anticlerical tradition of Bentham. But neither he nor his followers
gion of charity" a purer form of the teaching of Christ. When one such
disciple, John Finch, wrote to "Father Owen" in 1838 asking to
384 Happiness
Christian millennium. Toward the end of his life, Fourier himself gave
increasing, if never entirely wholehearted, encouragement to this
trend, speaking of himself as the Messiah of Reason. His disciples
showed far less restraint, embracing their departed master as "the man
chosen by Christ" to usher in the kingdom of God on earth. In America,
pilgrims throughout the whole of Europe, and even set out on a jour-
tack what they regarded as the injustices and absurdities of the estab-
lished churches, they borrowed from doctrine and scripture as they
happiness that it can achieve during its worldly existence, that you
44
will succeed in establishing Christianity." This was an earthly ethic
par excellence, like all these religions, a religion of life.
45
to the Christian Church." As every one of these early Utopians under-
stood —drawing in this respect on the wider cultural climate of Ro-
manticism and the religious revival of the first part of the nineteenth
century — the Enlightenment had opened up a void that needed to be
filled. Just as in that other great age of transition, the time of the pas-
sage from classical civilization to Christianity, "the need of a religion,
capable of replacing the old, was [now] making itself felt." 46 The Uto-
pian socialists understood that need and attempted to respond accord-
ingly. Bread was of great importance, they knew. But there was more
to life than bread.
tific socialism" from the "pocket editions of the New Jerusalem," the
"new social gospel" heralded by their predecessors. 47
When viewed
from the vantage point of the twenty-first century, this condescen-
sion is amusing, for the dreams of Marx and Engels now scarcely seem
less utopian than those of Cabet, Owen, Fourier, and Saint-Simon. But
against which to weigh the human folly of his time. But the term it-
tween 1825 and 1830, the most famous at "New Harmony," Indiana,
Darrin M. McMahon 387
gion, science, and the elucidation of the past, they gestured toward the
future. The point was not to contemplate a better world but to make it,
not the first subject that comes to mind. Yet there it is, tucked in-
pretation of happiness," the rich man's search for pleasure is the poor
man's pain, a search that "divorced from social aims, degenerates into
egoism, . . . tramples upon the interests of others and morally cripples
the human personality." "If one wishes to be an animal," the entry
continues, citing Marx, "one may, of course, turn one's back on the
sufferings of humanity and worry about one's own skin." But true com-
munists would think more highly of man, recognizing that it was only
"through conscientious service to people and through a revolution-
Darrin M. McMahon 389
life with that higher meaning and is granted that profound satisfac-
48
tion which he perceives as happiness."
The latter are not Marx's precise words. And "happiness" is prob-
ably not the first topic that comes to mind when flipping through the
pages of his works, either. The combative scholar and activist could be
this world, which provide such essential comfort for the man of feel-
ing in this vale of woe?" Herr Marx granted that his son was "obvi-
ously animated and ruled by a demon not given to all men," but
whether this daimon was of a heavenly or a Faustian variety, he did
not know. "Will you ever —and this is the doubt that causes me the
most pain —be receptive to true human happiness . . . ? Will you ever
... be able to spread happiness to your immediate surroundings?" 50
Good bourgeois that he was, Marx's father worried chiefly about
"domestic happiness," and on this score, his son was reasonably suc-
cessful, fathering a flock of children with his first love, Jenny, to whom
he remained faithfully attached (if not always faithful) throughout his
life. But in theory, at least, Marx was obliged to discount such happi-
ness, depicting marriage and the nuclear family in his writings as a
390 Happiness
man over the rest of creation, but at the same time it is an act which
can destroy his whole life, frustrate all his plans, and make him un-
happy." Man's freedom entailed a perilous choice. Either he could
live in keeping with the "general aim" intended by the "Deity"
that of "ennobling mankind and himself — or, choosing wrongly, he
might devote his life to pointless labor for which he possessed little
It is safe to say that tears have been shed on Marx's grave, whether of
sadness or of joy. But more surprising to many will be his early invoca-
tion of Christ, that "ideal being," as a model of virtuous behavior. The
mature Marx quickly abandoned these childish illusions. Yet he never
entirely severed the umbilical cord that tied happiness to salvation
Darrin M. McMahon 391
ence," on the one hand, and what he tried so hard to condemn as a dan-
is hard to find Marx himself saying anything nice about religion after his
turn lies crushed beneath his feet, and we by his triumph are
lifted level with the skies. 53
392 Happiness
space once occupied by religion, that one catches a hint of the sacred
halo. It is a pledge reminiscent of the gospel of Lequinio and the
Jacobin representatives-on-mission — a ray of the promise that, when
"lifted level with the skies," humanity would live, as Epicurus had
claimed, "as gods among men," leaving their unhappiness behind.
called Young or Left Hegelians who wished to push the master's teach-
ings in a more revolutionary direction —Marx put forth as an explicit
political goal what Hegel himself had understood as the natural work
of the spirit: the overcoming of human alienation and the healing of
the unhappy consciousness. Making ample use of Hegel's words
{Entdusserung and Entfremdung) to describe the condition of contem-
porary human alienation and estrangement, Marx considerably ex-
panded Hegel's analysis of their causes and kinds.
Unlike animals, who are "immediately one" with their life activity
and surroundings, human beings are out of sorts. 55 They are estranged
from nature, which they view as foreign, hostile, something to be con-
quered, exploited, or subdued. They are estranged from themselves
and their fellow men, whom they regard similarly as aliens and out-
siders, having lost their original sense of what Marx termed "species-
being," their natural sense of communal identity and belonging to the
human species. And they are estranged from their active function
their labor —which they regard dehumanizing. There were other
as
But it was above all the estrangement from life activity — the alien-
ation of labor — that Marx regarded as the crucial concern. For in his
rapidly evolving system, man was homo faber, a creature who defines
himself by what he makes and does. Economic activity —work—was
thus the key to all else, a fact that was most apparent among the poor
in contemporary capitalist societies, where, Marx believed, human
alienation was more pronounced than at any other stage in human
history. In the dismal factories of Manchester studied by Engels, in
being," he noted, "is the alienation of man from man. What is true of
man's relationship to his work, to the product of his work, and to him-
self, is also true of man's relationship to the other man, and to that
man's labor and the object of his labor." And so the chain reaction
continued: the awful truth of capitalism was that the various forms of
alienation that it induced "transform [ed] the consciousness which man
has of his species" in such a way that one's fellows became nothing more
394 Happiness
The "torpor of his mind," Smith continued, and the "corruption" of his
body render such a man incapable of sharing in rational discussion, of
participating in the joys and duties of social life, of judging of the "great
and extensive interests of his country," even of bearing arms in defense
of his homeland. Dexterity in his particular trade thus comes at the
expense of his "intellectual, social, and martial virtues." And lest there
of history":
laws and packaged in a pseudo-science that covered over its true debt
to religion, this was a powerful doctrine indeed, all the more so for
Marx's refusal to describe in any but the barest terms the nature of
the life to come. Devoting himself instead to demonstrating the
economic laws that would guarantee the constitution of the new city
every man could imagine that his own vision would somehow, some-
day, correspond to the vision of all.
Riddles Revealed
"The story is told," Walter Benjamin tells us, "of an automaton con-
structed in such a way that it could play a winning game of chess, an-
Darrin M. McMahon 399
The story, properly speaking, was no story at all but a gem of historical
fact. Beginning in 1770, the so-called Turk — a dazzling chess-playing
But the essay for which this brief vignette serves as an opening gambit
was more concerned with unveiling historical deception than revealing
historical truth. In "Theses on the Philosophy of History," the automa-
ton plays for Benjamin as metaphor, allowing him to pull away the veil:
Theology, Benjamin disclosed, was the hidden dwarf who moved the
historical materialist's hands.
400 Happiness
Written as he fled from Nazi forces in 1940, and just months before
he committed suicide in the mistaken belief that his capture was im-
minent, "Theses on the Philosophy of History" represents Benjamin's
final reckoning with his relationship to historical materialism. For some
time that relationship had been strained — not only by the rumors and
revelations of Stalin's crimes but even more so by Benjamin's own
enduring fascination with historical idealism in the form of messianic
Jewish theology. If that relationship had always made him a curious
The same freedom from envy toward the future that had once prompted
good souls to wait in patience for the coming of the Lord now moved
the masses to trust blindly in the natural course of progress. But
"progress," Benjamin affirmed, was a storm that obliterated everything
wake. In the present, all who wagered with the "Turk" of historical
materialism were fated to lose. And in the future, any such wagerers
would be dead.
Despite his unveiling of the communist's cabinet, it is not clear that
Benjamin successfully freed himself from its illusions. His devastat-
ing critique of historical-materialist progress notwithstanding, he fin-
ished his cryptic essay by holding out hope that human beings might
still be fully redeemed. "For every second of time was the strait gate
72
through which the Messiah might enter," the essay ends. This was
political theology of an apocalyptic, not historically progressive, sort.
union left wreckage upon wreckage in its wake. But still the faith
endured that "our new happy life" was at hand. The phrase is that of
the Ministry of Plenty in Orwell's 1984. But it was uttered in fact as
402 Happiness
Given what is now known about the horrors of the communist ex-
perience in virtually every one of its concrete applications, it seems
remarkable that so many for so long could have sustained the faith that
happiness was at hand. Yet when we bear in mind that this faith like —
the larger Marxian project of which it formed a part was a symptom —
of a much broader post-Enlightenment conviction, then the credulity
is in some ways easier to comprehend. Consider that Marx's central
assumption — that human labor could serve as the agent of our deliv-
Work — toil with one's hands — had for centuries prior to the En-
lightenment been regarded as an imposition, a terrible necessity,
God's curse for Adam's sin. Sweat on the human brow was an eternal
reminder of the condemnation to seek out sustenance from the
blighted earth beyond the Garden, scattered with thistles and thorns.
With reason had European societies barred the most fortunate — the
happy aristocratic few —from working with their hands. By definition,
a life of privilege was a life without labor. And the happiness of death
was the eternal rest of peaceful repose.
That men and women should come to believe —even to expect — that
do. But he rightly discerned that the force of industry was slowly trans-
forming the nature of work, multiplying both its productivity and its
404 Happiness
higher end.
This hope was kept alive by generations of visionaries. As the En-
glish socialist and artist William Morris dreams proleptically toward
the end of his Utopian masterpiece News from Nowhere (1890), "Thus
at last and by slow degrees we got pleasure into our work; then we
became conscious of that pleasure, and cultivated it, and took care that
we had our fill of it; and then all was gained, and we were happy. So
may it be for ages and ages!" 73 Homo faber homo felix est. Man becomes
happy in his work.
Marx and his followers did much to further this hope. But they did
not invent it. In truth, the belief that we can make ourselves happy
through effort of our own has been a part of the Western tradition since
Socrates and the Greeks attempted to wrest eudaimonia from the
clutches of fortune. Happiness, in their view, was the product of the
refined craftsmanship of living —something, at least in part, that we
could make on our own. And although the Greeks and their succes-
sors restricted this trade —
confining the highest human end to life's
master artisans, an elite guild of "workers," who could build their lives
better that the common lot —Christianity and then the Enlighten-
ment destroyed this closed shop, bidding all to work toward their
deliverance, and to find deliverance in their work. In keeping with the
greatest good of the greatest number, happiness should be sought in
ture? This was the old tragic surmise, dismissed by the philosophers
of the Enlightenment and the followers of Marx as so much fatalistic
JOYFUL SCIENCE
Are animals happy? Are they happier than human beings? Are
human beings animals? Questions of this kind have evolved natu-
rally out of the Western intellectual tradition, and their fossils can be
found embedded deep in the bedrock of the past. That great zoolo-
gist Aristotle, who helped frame the dominant answers for the suc-
ceeding millennium and a half, concluded that man was indeed an
animal but of a very special kind apolitical animal (politikon zoon),
naturally social and set apart from the lesser beasts by his faculty of
good. 1
It is happiness that makes us truly human.
But if happiness — a life lived according to virtue — is the culmination
and quintessence of human existence, it is also, Aristotle hastened to
add, a "god-like life," an existence "superior to the human level" that
Christ may have likened himself to a sacrificial lamb, the lamb of God
(agnusdei), and addressed his flock as a shepherd to sheep; Saint Francis
Darrin M. McMahon 407
may have preached sermons to the birds. But not all of God's creatures,
Christians knew, were equally blessed. Only man was made in the image
of the Creator, and only man was born for ultimate felicity. "The brutes
and things below him can neither go nor be drawn to that level," Pico
that is, that it attains its own formal perfection. "More happy are the
plants," Pico added, "which also have life; and happier still are the ani-
."
mals, which have been allotted consciousness. . . But of all the living
things that creep and crawl on the earth, man, it was clear, was the "ani-
2
mal that is most happy." Only he could be drawn to God.
Both classical and Christian commentators concurred in granting
minion over the beasts. But it was also clear that the very faculties that
conferred this happy place —reason and freedom of —could will lead
them down to levels of depravity that even the lowest creatures did
not know. Slithering on their bellies like the serpent that had defiled
them, human beings could turn their precious gifts to evil ends, ren-
dering themselves most miserable in the process. From the vantage
point of this lowly place, it was perfectly possible to look up to the
beasts are braver, more chaste, and more temperate than human
beings. Spurning irregularity and excess, depravity and misplaced pas-
sion, they live within their means, ruled for the most part only by "es-
sential desires and pleasures." 4 Were it not for the favor of the gods,
human beings would be at a natural disadvantage.
408 Happiness
more wretched than the brutes. ." The only thing that makes human
. .
beings superior, Calvin judged, "is the worship of God, through which
5
alone they aspire to immortality." Montaigne spoke less of the Cre-
ator. Yet the celebrated skeptic agreed that it was only by "foolish
pride and stubbornness that we set ourselves before the other ani-
mals. . .
." Impoverished by inconstancy, irresolution, uncertainty,
grief, superstition, ambition, avarice, jealousy, and a host of other
"untamable appetites," human beings had "strangely overpaid" for
his claim that animals, like human beings, experience feelings of plea-
sure and pain. "The question is not," Bentham stressed, "can [ani-
mals] reason, but can they suffer?" 8 The "humanity" of this position
notwithstanding, most still found the "pig happiness" of human be-
ings a difficult concept to swallow. As J. S. Mill was quick to empha-
size, it is better to be an unhappy human being than a satisfied pig.
^JB
s
'
1"
i
#Jimk1
1
m3 kk
.'
..**
mSKmV--'
Wrl'4
m *w
410 Happiness
But what if the animal in question was a monkey, not a pig, and what
if the monkey was a man? This was the unthinkable question put to
the world by Charles Darwin, who as early as the 1830s was putting
the question to himself. "He who understands [a] baboon [will] do
more towards metaphysics than Locke," he scrawled in a private note-
book in 1838.
9
The field of happiness would be profoundly altered by
the force of his speculation. And as developments in biology propelled
his life, would say how many good dinners ... he had had, he
would say how many happy days he spent in such a place. 13
412 Happiness
pain. . . .
experience (the calculus of pleasure and pain). "One says our rule is
what ^'///produce the greatest happiness. The other says we have a —
moral sense. —
But my view <says> unites both <<and shows them
to be almost identical>>." 16
Here, after having so far largely restated the views of others, Darwin
hints at genuinely originality. Speaking of an "instinctive" moral sense,
best for our good far back" Enticingly, he then adds, "Society could not
go on except for the moral sense, any more than a hive of Bees without
their instincts." 17 Darwin is positing not only what he called "instinc-
similarly honed by long experience. Both bear directly on our social in-
check" on licentiousness. But though it was not odd that man should
have developed such strong emotions in the first place ("with lesser
intellect," Darwin adds, "they might be necessary & no doubt were
preservative"), experience has shown that we now need to "check"
19
these instincts in the service of happiness. In a striking formulation,
Darwin observes, "Our descent, then, is the origin of our evil pas-
sions!! —The Devil under form of Baboon is our grandfather!
— 20
In
a very real way, it seems, human beings must struggle with the beast
within.
But this was merely the vista opened up by looking "far back." Gaz-
ing "far forward," the view was rosier, for it seemed to Darwin that
our more aggressive impulses were "slowly vanishing." "Civilization is
his analysis through which doubters, like Thomas, might poke their
fingers in disbelief. It was far from clear, he confessed, that his natu-
tain that human beings could so easily transcend the devil of their
descent. In an extended passage treating what Darwin called the "gen-
eral delusion about free will," he observed that human beings' belief
in their own moral agency stemmed largely from their inability to dis-
them" —these motives remained hidden to all save the man "who has
thought very much" about them. 24
Even that wise man — in this case,
havior for greater happiness and the greatest good, human beings
might be captive to the hidden motives that ruled them, slaves to the
beast within.
Darwin never completed the formal "discussion" of happiness that
these rough reflections were apparently intended to serve. Nor,
clearly, did he ever intend for prying eyes to pick over the broken syn-
tax of his notes. But having done so, we are in a position to see what
otherwise might well be obscured: his intense early interest in the
subject of happiness and the way it reemerges, with surprising consis-
tency and similar contradiction, in the work in which he most closely
compares the behavior of the lower animals with that of human be-
ings, The Descent of Man (1871).
Over thirty years had elapsed in the interim, and Darwin was now
at the height of his career, as the successful author of The Origin of
Species (1859) and the acknowledged father of the theory of evolution
and its attendant doctrines of adaptation, mutability, and natural se-
lection. Extremely controversial, The Origin of Species had inevitably
raised, though not explicitly addressed, the question of the place of
human beings in evolutionary theory. It was to that question that Dar-
win turned in The Descent of Man, arguing unambiguously for the "close
similarity" between human beings and the lower animals "in embryonic
Darrin M. McMahon 415
the subject published the following year, The Expression of the Emotions
in Man andAnimals (1872), Darwin described cases of spiteful monkeys,
terrified storks, and enraged bees. He explained that "some dogs and
horses are ill-tempered, and easily turn sulky; others are good-tempered;
and [that] these qualities are certainly inherited." 27 And he argued
that joy and happiness were emotions not unique to man:
Although Darwin did not possess the knowledge of genetics that would
have helped him understand the crucial mechanism that governed
this process, his general insight that mood and affect —grumpiness
and good temper —were heritable traits was profoundly insightful. His
first forays into what is today the thriving field of evolutionary psy-
chology would prove revolutionary.
But did this mean that human beings and other animals merely re-
acted to the external stimuli of pleasure and pain? Darwin acknowledged
416 Happiness
Darwin's studies of sadness, from The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals,
1872. Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University.
the critical role played by pain and pleasure in the process of evolu-
tionary development. Yet whereas those in the Utilitarian tradition
maintained that actions were beneficial only if they produced pleasure
and minimized pain, Darwin reversed the proposition, arguing instead
"that natural selection produced pleasure only if that pleasurable state
induced beneficial actions." 29
And these beneficial actions — actions
that furthered reproduction and survival —were to be calculated in
evolutionary terms not with reference to the individual but with re-
spect to the group. Returning to a theme that he had taken up in his
1838 notebooks, Darwin again put forth the notion of a "social in-
greater good. Darwin singled out the case of animals perpetually ready
to utter the danger signal, and so expose themselves to peril, in de-
fense of the community. And he highlighted the disturbing example
of the worker bee that kills its brother drones, or the queen bee that
kills its daughter-queen
— "the desire to destroy their nearest rela-
expense of other men," it was also precisely this conflict between com-
peting natural impulses that gave rise to conscience. As Darwin had
intimated in his 1838 notes, and now repeated here, by virtue of his
sions and images are incessantly and clearly passing through his
mind." 33 And so, after indulging a stronger selfish impulse at the ex-
pense of his social instinct, man "will then feel remorse, repentance,
to act differently for the future; and this is conscience; for conscience
34
looks backwards, and serves as a guide for the future."
for human happiness in our animal nature are Darwin's final conclusions
regarding the Utilitarian tradition. Summarizing the argument of his two
principal chapters comparing the mental powers of man and the lower
animals, Darwin explicitly cites and rejects Bentham's and Mill's con-
tentions that the motive for every human action must be pleasure or
pose" of the social instinct in both the lower animals and man, he is
At first reading, Darwin's substitution of the general good for the gen-
eral happiness may seem innocuous. But when we consider that the
"general good" amounts simply to the survival of the species, it be-
comes far less clear that the good and happiness were as closely linked
as Darwin would have liked to believe. "No doubt the welfare and
the happiness of the individual usually coincide," he observed, "and
a contented, happy tribe will flourish better than one that is discon-
tented and unhappy." But consider what "flourishing" entails. In The
Origin of Species, Darwin himself had painted a vivid picture, charac-
vigor and health as a "Struggle for Existence" and "the great battle of
life." We customarily "behold the face of nature bright with gladness,"
he pointed out, but the smile was deceptive. "We do not see, or we
forget, that the birds which are idly singing around us . . . are con-
stantly destroying life; or we forget how largely these songsters, or
their eggs, or their nestlings, are destroyed by birds and beasts of
prey. . .
." Starvation, pestilence, competition, and slaughter were
endemic to the struggle of existence:
Each generation "has to struggle for life, and to suffer great destruc-
felt, that death is generally prompt, and that the vigorous, the healthy,
and the happy survive and multiply." 40
Not all, to say the least, found this image of the "survival of the
happiest" particularly consoling —something of which Darwin was well
aware. And though he bravely put a positive face on his conclusions in
The Descent of Man — maintaining that over time our social instincts
would grow stronger, the struggle between our higher and lower im-
pulses less severe, and "virtue will be triumphant" — it is never clear
41
that his own findings justified such optimism. As he freely admitted
elsewhere, "there seems to be no more design ... in the action of
natural selection, than in the course which the wind blows." If this
were the case, then Darwin's assumption of fair weather and gentle
breezes — his confidence in the happy course of humanity —was
founded less on fact than on faith.
priately enough, with his religious beliefs, that it might rightly be asked
how "the generally beneficent arrangement of the world" can be ac-
counted for. Some writers, he recognized, had been "so much impressed
with the amount of suffering in the world, that they doubt if we look to
uphold it —uphold, that is, the "belief that all sentient beings have been
formed so as to enjoy, as a general rule, happiness." 42
—
422 Happiness
both pleasure and pain can cause animals to "pursue that course of
action which is the most beneficial to the species," he argues that
pleasure is the stronger force. "Pain or suffering of any kind, if long
continued, causes depression and lessens the power of action. . . .
or greater doses of the same when the initial "rush" wears off. It is this
filled desire keeps us on the chase, ever eager to ensure our survival
and that of our kin.
424 Happiness
But how, one is left to wonder, could Darwin sustain his own faith,
his faith not in God but in human happiness? For in effect he con-
tinued to cling to a species of theodicy, arguing that the terrible
suffering of the world worked, unwittingly, for the "moral improve-
"thatman in the distant future will be a far more perfect creature than
he now is, it is an intolerable thought that he and all other sentient
beings are doomed to complete annihilation after such long-continued
slow progress." Intolerable, yes, but as he fully acknowledged, this was
the gathering consensus of science, which believed that the "sun
46
with all the planets will one day grow too cold for life." Confronted,
looking backward, with the "suffering of millions of the lower ani-
mals throughout almost endless time," and faced, looking forward,
with the total extinction of earthly life, it took a brave individual —
defiantly optimistic individual — to maintain an unflinching smile in
the present. Darwin was such a man. Many contemporaries felt obliged
to respect his fortitude. But many more found it difficult to share
his faith that a small surplus of pleasure in the balance sheet of sen-
Ecce Homo
ing for laughing lions. And he loved creatures that have no settled home,
hardened for hard journeys, like the dromedary, ready to bear difficult
loads. In order to be born again, and then to be raised anew, man must
evolve: "Of three metamorphoses of the spirit I tell you: how the spirit
47
becomes a camel; and the camel, a lion; and the lion, finally, a child."
telling by way of his mythical prophet a fable and truth that was close
Darrin M. McMahon 425
to his own heart. Anyone who would dare to roar like a lion at all that
had been said and done must first take on his back that same load,
carry its weight like a beast of burden, suffer under its strain. Only
then could he claw out in defiance, and only then, when he had freed
himself from its weight, could the "preying lion" become a child
"innocence and forgetting, a new beginning, a game, a self-propelled
48
wheel, a first movement, a sacred Yes." This creature of affirmation,
this blessed child, would then pull himself upward to his own (self-)
lion that he grew to be, he lashed out at its weight, cutting away the
ties that held him to the past. Whether he evolved into a child — or
Greek philology. He was thus deeply schooled in both the classical and
Christian traditions, and in grappling with the weight of these traditions,
he was forced to come to terms with happiness. The subject is central
'that I am so sad; the problem 'I don't know what that means.' . .
." 50
426 Happiness
the early Greeks, Nietzsche argued, had been led by their sensitivity
to create powerful means of defense to protect them in their pain. The
pantheon of Olympian gods, who "justified human life by living it
the zenith of their happiness and who feel that their whole being is
of Christianity, but they also presented grave difficulties for any new
attempt to justify humanity on a higher plane. As the prophet mocks in
Vincent Van Gogh, Still Life with Bible, 1885, Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam.
The former lay preacher Van Gogh here juxtaposes ancient and modern scripture:
the Bible and Emile Zola's novel, La Joie de vivre, the joy or happiness of life.
suit ever since. The great initiator of this elusive quest — a man at once
awesome, terrible, and sublime —was Socrates.
thought . . . might plumb the farthest abyss of being and even correct
65
it." His faith was that knowledge could be the "true panacea" of exis-
tence. This, Nietzsche believes, is the "grand metaphysical illusion" that
lies at the heart of Socrates's teaching, animating his central trinity: "Vir-
tue is knowledge; all sins arise from ignorance; only the virtuous are
happy." These "three basic formulations of optimism," Nietzsche in-
sists, spelled the death of the tragic spirit, saddling humanity with the
fundamental error that reason alone held the key to virtue and happiness. 66
Despite important refinements in his thinking, Nietzsche never
abandoned this fundamental conviction. At the end of his career, just
two years before his descent into madness in 1890, he returned to the
"Happiness." And "if man does not in fact achieve happiness," why is
that? "Because," Nietzsche continued in the post-Socratic voice:
67
as reason that virtue is the way to happiness.
It was precisely this same false equation that animated the think-
ing of the Enlightenment, with its insistence on bringing happiness
est happiness for the greatest number" was not confined to Britain.
socialist tradition, those "levelers" who strive with "all their powers [for]
self they take for something that must be abolished."™ This Nietzsche
felt to be as futile as it was misconceived. The aspiration itself, more-
over — to sympathize with all suffering and then to try to resolve it in
flicted feelings toward the figures of the philosopher and the heroic
artist. But again, what is not in doubt is Nietzsche's estimation of
Christ's impact, and of the tradition that grew up (however wrongly) in
negative, Nietzsche never abandoned his immense respect for the disci-
pline, self-control, and self-overcoming of the Christian ascetic and saint.
432 Happiness
which will one day be balanced up and paid back with enormous in-
"To see somebody suffer is nice," Nietzsche later quipped, "to make
somebody suffer even nicer." 74 The psychological appeal of Christian-
ity lay not only in its tranquilizing promise of deferred reward, but also
in the way that it directed human resentment in the here and now.
Christianity's bid to make the first last and the last first was also an at-
will to power over others and over oneself. Terribly misled regarding
come like God. They did so, though, at a tremendous cost, for their
efforts involved a terrible sundering of the self, erecting a fatal divi-
sion between our wretched animal nature and our eternal spiritual
soul. In struggling for the victory of the one over the other, the Chris-
tian athlete had succeeded in making man feel shame "at being man"
The result of this trial was, paradoxically, to render human beings less
fit than animals. Weighed down by guilt, despairing of life itself, they
had become more wretched than the beasts:
Once an ape, man had devolved into something less, and now suffered
waves of nausea, hating the very thing he was. Before he could seek
transcendence, he must learn to accept himself.
Walking in the Upper Engadine mountains of Switzerland, near Sils-
Maria
—"6,000 above the ocean andfeet far higher still above all things
human!" — Nietzsche saw the of light this transcendence. The date
was August 6, 1881, and in his subsequently published Ecce Homo —
"Behold the Man," an allusion to the words spoken by Pontius Pilate
when he first sets eyes on Christ in John 19:5 —Nietzsche provides an
illuminating description of his own "revelation":
with total seriousness, although he was not above joking that his "deep-
est objection" to the concept was the frightening prospect of the eter-
Whether one is able to conceive of the concept with clarity is less impor-
tant in the context of Nietzsche's understanding of happiness than is
the fact that it gave him precisely what he had struggled, and failed, to
A vision —
man this, Nietzsche openly
of a fully redeemed, godlike
acknowledged, was a species of faith. And yet it was a faith in life, a
"faith in oneself"" as opposed to the faith in God or science of old.
but also the "sublimation" of its powers into something loftier than
mere violence. Well before Freud, Nietzsche was employing that word
in this distinct sense, stressing our need to mediate and channel baser
instincts into higher goals. Cruelty, aggression, the will to dominate
and conquer were all part of our animal nature. But they were not ends
in themselves. They must be put to nobler uses.
And what might those be? To what ends should human beings di-
rect their protean will to power? In an analysis that influenced Weber,
Nietzsche admitted candidly that he did not know, that he could not
know: The world and an exhausted Western culture, he believed, were
no longer able to provide convincing answers to such questions. The
point was to create them, and this was precisely the task of the higher
men, who having borne on their backs the burden of Western culture
and then thrown it off, would be free to lead on toward new endeav-
ors, establishing new tasks, new values, and new goals. These higher
men, these overmen, would justify humanity, leading the way to de-
liverance. "Let us face ourselves," Nietzsche implores these select few
with reference to the Greek myth of a region beyond Boreas, the North
Wind, where happy men can dwell:
"Neither by land nor by sea will you find the way to the
Hyperboreans" — Pindar already knew this about us. Beyond
the north, ice, and death our life, our happiness. We have
discovered happiness, we know the way, we have found the
exit out of the labyrinth of thousands of years. Who else has
found it? Modern man perhaps? "I have got lost," sighs
438 Happiness
one suspects that he may have lost his way somewhere on the line that
led from animal to overman. What he hoped to leave behind him is rea-
sonably clear, and with respect to happiness, there can be few doubts at
all. The lion had lashed away at the camel's back, leaving much of its
was more successful as beast of burden and defiant lion than as over-
man. Certainly, his ecstatic visions appealed to many. Yet his gaze is
most piercing not when directed upward but when focused down and
within. In emphasizing our psychological kinship to the animals that
we are, he stressed powerfully that there is more to the human psyche
than can be comprehended by what he referred to contemptuously as
the modern "religion of comfortableness." 87 This yearning for an end
Darrin M. McMahon 439
Henri Matisse, Sketch for Le Bonheur de Vivre, 1905-1906, San Francisco Museum
of Modern Art. Bequest of Elise S. Haas, © Succession H. Matisse,
Paris/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.
to all struggle, for an end to all pain, was what motivated the "last men"
of modern societies, who had peopled the earth in ever greater num-
bers since the eighteenth century. "'We have invented happiness,' say
the last men, and they blink. They have left the regions where it was
88
hard to live, for one needs warmth." But in their warmth and their
struggle, suffer, and yearn, and that human happiness was ultimately
bound up with this striving. "How little you know of human happiness,
you comfortable and benevolent people, for happiness and unhappi-
ness are sisters and even twins that either grow up together or, as in
your case, remain small together." 89 "/Vb/for pleasure does man strive: but
90
for power," Nietzsche adds elsewhere in much the same spirit. Un-
less, and until, human beings comprehended this uncomfortable
—
440 Happiness
truth —venturing into the dark, sometimes cold regions of the psyche
they would remain blind to their deepest motives, cut off from their
ultimate potential for true happiness.
Tragic Happiness
is plain that important themes in his own work have much in com-
mon with Nietzsche's. Like his predecessor, Freud granted a central
role to the unconscious in determining human behavior, and he also
saw the overcoming of guilt as a primary human task. He accepted
the death of God without anguish, regarding religion as an illusion
without a future, and he looked with open eyes at the dark side of
the human character, attempting to shed light on our lust for power
and aggression, our resentments and manifold sexual desires.
the "great Darwin" and indeed was partially induced to study biology
and medicine at university after coming into contact with his work.
"The theories of Darwin," Freud wrote in his autobiography, "strongly
attracted me, for they held out hopes of an extraordinary advance in
our understanding of the world. . .
," 92 Building on the same theories,
Freud made extraordinary advances of his own, coming to see the mind
of the animal man, like the body, as a product of evolutionary devel-
opment —adaptive, dynamic, governed by instinctive forces, non-
rational drives, and atavistic traits.
tion of the purpose of life had been raised countless times and had
never yet received a satisfactory answer," Freud concluded that we
93
had a "right to dismiss it" altogether.
Nor did Freud, like Nietzsche, continue to hold out hope in the
"overcoming" of human contradictions or the overcoming of man.
Ironically, given Nietzsche's lifelong interest in the literature of Greek
tragedy, Freud was the more uncompromisingly tragic thinker of the
two. It was not by coincidence that he used the name of the consum-
mate hero of Greek tragoidia —Sophocles's Oedipus Rex— to describe
what he regarded as the most basic of all human conflicts. In the in-
herent struggle between parent and child, Freud saw evidence that a
bit of tragedy was embedded in all of us from the beginning. "One feels
inclined to say," he observed in another connection, "that the inten-
tion that man should be 'happy' is not in the plan of 'Creation.'" 94
This tough-minded aspect of Freud's thought —aware and accept-
ing of the innate conflicts of human experience — not always ade-
is
promise that Freud himself never would have thought to extend. Early
—
442 Happiness
in his career, he put the matter clearly. When asked by a patient how
he proposed to help her, even though, as she had already acknowl-
edged, her illness was closely bound up with the particular circum-
stances of her life, Freud had this to say:
1895, this is Freud's famous avowal that the goal of what he would
first term "psychoanalysis" the following year was in fact relatively
and wish to achieve in it?" he asked. "The answer to this can hardly
be in doubt. They strive after happiness; they want to become happy
and to remain so." 99
tive. "It aims, on the one hand, at an absence of pain and unpleasure,
and, on the other, at the experiencing of strong feelings of pleasure.
In its narrower sense the word 'happiness' only relates to the last."
program "is at loggerheads with the whole world, with the macro-
cosm as much as with the microcosm. There is no possibility at all of
its being carried through; all the regulations of the universe run
102
counter to it."
nature itself. On the one hand, Freud pointed out what others before
him had observed: the insatiability of human desire. "What we call
faction of drink declines. Like children who quickly tire of the nov-
elty of their birthday toys, "we are so made that we can derive intense
enjoyment only from a contrast and very little from a state of things.
Thus our possibilities are already restricted by our constitution." 103
By adding the authority of psychiatry to the philosophical conclu-
sions of moralists, Freud anticipated the "hedonic treadmill" (the trag-
Yet it is more likely that he would have embraced it. For Freud wrote
with a different temperament and in a different time. He had wit-
nessed the incredible carnage of World War I, and he watched as the
that the "toxic side of mental processes" had not received proper
scientific study. But having himself experimented with cocaine, he
was able to speak from experience when he observed that substances
that allowed the user to "withdraw from the pressure of reality and
find refuge in a world of one's own" were dangerously attractive and
potentially harmful, responsible in certain circumstances for the use-
less waste of a "large quota of energy " that might be 7
far better em-
ployed. The chemical means to happiness, he concluded, could never
be anything more than a temporary expedient. 106
7
446 Happiness
achieved by the saints. But again he judged this strategy lacking. "If it
succeeds, then the subject has . . . given up all other activities as
well —he has sacrificed his life; and, by another path, he has once more
only achieved the happiness of quietness." 107 The remedy was more
severe than the condition it sought to cure.
"Another and better path," Freud believed, was that of "becoming
a member of the human community," and "working for the good of
all." Or even more ambitiously, one could "try to re-create the world,
volved in creative and productive work. Although not even the most
engrossing forms of labor could provide "impenetrable armor against
the arrows of fortune," Freud commended "professional activity"
especially "psychical and intellectual work" — as a source of "special
ceded that erotic love perhaps "does in fact come nearer to this goal [of
the positive fulfillment of happiness] than any other method." 113
Yet Freud hastened to add that "the weak side of this technique of
living is easy to see," for otherwise "no human being would have
thought of abandoning this path to happiness for any other." We are
115
and methods examined in this book. Socrates's and Plato's subli-
Freud was well aware that he might have added other strategies to
his list. But "in spite of [its] incompleteness," he felt confident to
venture the conclusion, "The program of becoming happy, which the
pleasure principle imposes on us, cannot be fulfilled." The statement
was less bleak than it might seem, for Freud added immediately that
"we must not — indeed, we cannot— give up our efforts to bring it [the
program of becoming happy] nearer to fulfillment by some means or
other." 116 This was the human predicament in Freud's eyes: tragic in
its plight, but also tragic in a more uplifting sense, one that empha-
sized man's heroic refusal to succumb passively to the decrees of fate.
Human beings would struggle for happiness until the end. Far from
despairing at our inevitable defeat, Freud saw something noble in our
very defiance.
Nor did he admit that the fact that happiness was not in the plan of
was true that by no path to happiness "can we attain all that we de-
sire," it was also true that there were "many paths which may lead to
sisted, "If we cannot remove all suffering, we can remove some, and
Darrin M. McMahon 449
placed guilt. "The price we pay for our advance in civilization is a loss
open the prospect that "we may expect gradually to carry through such
alterations in our civilization that will better satisfy our needs." 122 And
on the other, he saw psychoanalysis as a means for dealing with anxi-
ety and guilt, allowing us to learn to sublimate our aggressive and de-
structive impulses into healthier, more productive behavior. On this
alone. Gone were any last links to a transcendent calling, to the nec-
wishes, or that was forbidden to him. One may say, therefore, that these
gods were cultural ideals." But today, Freud continued, man "has come
very close to the attainment of this ideal, he has almost become a god
himself." Freud acknowledged that the process was still incomplete. It
would be better to say that man has become "a kind of prosthetic God,"
more." Yet creator that he was, man, in one critical respect, was still not
made in the image of his ideal likeness. "In the interests of our investi-
gations," Freud cautioned, "we will not forget that present-day man does
not feel happy in his Godlike character." 124 With godlike powers, but
Darrin M. McMahon 451
Just two years after the publication of Freud's Civilization and Its
Discontents, Aldous Huxley issued a warning of a very different sort.
available to put a constant smile on one's face, providing "all the ad-
unquestioned.
Unquestioned, that is, by all save the awkward few, of whom the
"Savage" proves to be the most persistent. Clinging to atavistic
views, he dares to imagine that there might be more to life than good
feeling — yearning, instead, for knowledge, moral improvement, and
higher consciousness. As he explains to the "world controller" of the
brave new world in protesting his "right to be unhappy": "I don't want
comfort. I want God, I want poetry, I want real danger, I want free-
The price paid for happiness, the Savage knows, is too high. And
so, in a futile attempt to flee this "hard master," he returns to the wild,
living in isolation, mortifying his flesh, and praying to God in an effort
to purify his soul. His escape is short-lived, however, interrupted by
the insatiable media curiosity of the entertainment industry, at the
head of which is Darwin Bonaparte, a celebrated big-game photogra-
gressive posture of an "animal at bay." His only escape from these tor-
tion of the concerns of the Cold War, Brave New World continues to
more. And yet this same realization led him to what was perhaps his most
prescient —and disturbing— observation, that in the relentless search
for happiness, human beings would endeavor to alter their very nature,
tampering with the last bastion of fate: their genetic constitution.
CONCLUSION:
HAPPY ENDING
Estragon: am happy.
I
Vladimir: So am I.
Estragon: So am I.
Vladimir: We are happy.
extent that the stage still captured the surreal spectacle of the world,
his "tragicomedy in two acts" captured well the dogged pursuit of hap-
piness in the face of overwhelming despair. Despite their conclusion
that men are "pigs" and people "bloody ignorant apes," Vladimir and
Estragon continue to hope amid the skeletons and the emptiness that
surrounds them. In their "immense confusion," they are presented only
with the certainty that "the tears of the world are a constant quantity,"
yet they stumble on regardless, waiting for salvation, waiting for Godot.
They remember the tales of the Gospels, the maps of the holy land, the
Dead Sea. "That's where we'll go, I used to say, that's where we'll go for
our honeymoon. We'll swim. We'll be happy," Estragon muses. And
when he sleeps, he wakes to recall, "I was dreaming I was happy." It is
an activity that serves nicely to "pass the time." Even as the two wan-
derers know in their heart of hearts that there is "nothing to be done,"
they bumble on. And there is life in their bumbling.
This history of happiness began with the development of tragedy
(tragoidia) on the classical stage and in history itself. There, the tragic
hero was one who carried on despite irreconcilable conflicts and over-
whelming odds, struggling to maintain honor and pursue his end in
not be his lot, not only once but many times, to wish himself dead
rather than alive." 3 The tragic hero endures all, carrying on until the
final moment as best he can.
In this sense, Beckett's Waiting for Godot is unquestionably tragic,
and indeed, its "tragedy" is even more pronounced than that of its clas-
sical predecessors. For unlike the tragoidia of ancient times, the mod-
ern variant must do away completely with the convention that had
always sustained a ray of hope until the end. Here, there can be no
deus ex machina waiting in the wings to produce a final, miraculous
salvation, no god in the machine poised to swoop down to spirit away
—
456 Happiness
the heroes, to save Croesus from the flames, to resolve our fate.
Vladimir and Estragon yearn for the mysterious Godot, a man whose
arrival they believe will ensure that "we'll be saved." But Godot, of
course, never appears. The god in the machine has become the ghost
in the machine, who haunts by his absence, leaving only a wisp, a trace,
the faint sensation of spiritual presence, an evanescent hope of happi-
ness whose kingdom is resolutely of this earth.
The hope that God, or Godot, or some other holy ghost might one
day bring salvation has not been extinguished entirely. May it never
be. But few would deny that the horrors of the first half of the twen-
tieth century rendered such hope harder to sustain. With waning faith
that a deus ex machina will save them, Beckett's heroes can only cling
to the prospect of an earthly happiness that they know instinctively
not true" —but the moment they do so, they realize that they are still
viction, "At this place, at this moment of time, all mankind is us,
whether we like it or not. Let us make the most of it, before it is too
late! Let us represent worthily for once the foul brood to which a cruel
the historical actor Primo Levi, who suggests not only that poetry is
for it places a limit on every joy, but also on every grief. The
inevitable material cares oppose it: for as they poison every
lasting happiness, they equally assiduously distract us from
our misfortunes, and make our consciousness of them inter-
4
mittent and hence supportable.
Incredibly, even in the Lager (camp), one could still have hope; even
in the Lager, one could still draw comfort from the finality of death;
even in the Lager, one could still find distraction —and take relief
the here and now. Behind the immediate agony of frozen fingers might
lie the dull throbbing of hunger, the irritation of lice, the discomfort
of sleeplessness, the regret of family far away, the pain of an open sore.
But as soon as the cause of the first stress was removed (if it were at
all), one would be "grievously amazed to see that another lies be-
hind, and in reality a whole series of others." As Levi came to real-
ize, "Human nature is such that grief and pain ... do not add up as a
whole in our consciousness, but hide, the lesser behind the greater,
according to a definite law of perspective. It is providential and is our
means of surviving in 5
the camp." Similar to the way we are led along
458 Happiness
gas to fill the room of a conscious mind and a human soul. But it fol-
lows from this "that a very trifling thing can cause the greatest of
joys." Frankl speaks of how the "meager pleasures of camp life pro-
vided a
—
kind of negative happiness, 'freedom from suffering,' as
minder of "how beautiful the world could be" Et fax in tenebris facet. And
the light shineth in the darkness. Man for Frankl, as for Dostoyevsky
6
before him, is a being who "can get used to anything." It is at once an
uplifting and a harrowing thought.
Both Levi and Frankl were exceptional men, tragic heroes on the
world's stage, whose affirmation and endurance in the face of inde-
Within anywhere from three months to a year, the vast majority will
get back to their ''normal" selves, including those who have undergone
major accidents. Remarkably, as several fascinating studies have docu-
mented, even those who have been rendered quadriplegic in car or
anyone can ever fully recover from an event as shattering as the Holo-
caust. Levi himself committed suicide forty-two years after his lib-
*The exception to this pattern is depressive illness, which appears to interrupt the
mind's natural "thermostat" of mood, sending the afflicted into downward spirals
that are often controllable only by therapy or medication, if at all.
460 Happiness
several months), they invariably return, like the wave in a sine curve,
book have long known about the insatiability of human desire. Human
beings' proclivity to grow accustomed to, and then dissatisfied with,
their publicists would have us believe. Still, the studies of "impact bias"
and "affective forecasting," just like the ruminations on the "hedonic
treadmill" and the "tragedy of happiness," do shed empirical light on a
als — this search has yielded few certain discoveries. If there is a secret
to happiness, a modern wit has said, then that secret is closely guarded.
chill, the same haunting feeling of absence and expectation that lingers
on the stage well after the curtain has fallen on Waiting for Godot. Yet we
should not forget that this same spectacle can just as easily make us
laugh. Beckett's play, after all, is not strictly a tragedy but a tragicom-
edy, a work that reaffirms "that the tears of the world are a constant,"
yes, but that quickly reassures that "the same is true of the laugh."
Caught up in a universe they don't understand, uncertain of their situ-
ation and fate, Vladimir and Estragon are as much clowns as tragedians,
men who struggle to take their boots off at the beginning of the play
and fight to keep their pants up at the end. After Vladimir leaves his fly
vited to sympathize with their plight, but we are also asked to laugh.
For their efforts to entertain themselves — to pass the time — are ours.
consumer economy would be coupled in the early 1960s with the in-
vention of the birth control pill and the first stirrings in the loins of
what would prove a successful cultural assault on many of the "hang-
ups" and prejudices that continued to bar the way to pleasure. By
1972, who dared were free to indulge in the "joy of sex," as the best-
all
selling book of that name and year proclaimed. The work would go on
say I used to pray. Yes, I must confess I did," avows Winnie, the work's
late-middle-aged protagonist, who appears onstage in act 1, embed-
ded in a mound of earth that rises to her waist. "Not now." 10
It is true
that she begins the play with the familiar words "For Jesus Christ sake
Amen. . . . World without end," and lapses occasionally into what she
describes as the "old style," speaking of "blessings" and "mercies," and
other such "boons" that help her "through the day." Perhaps, Winnie
even ventures on one occasion, "someone is looking at me still." But
such consolation is crowded out by the far more pervasive thought:
"Oh this is going to be another happy day!"
Winnie reflects on the "happy memories" of the past, and the "happy
day to come" —and this, she declares, "is what I find so comforting when
I lose heart and envy the brute beast." Even as the ground rises in the
second (and final) act to surround all but her head, Winnie remains
defiantly optimistic in the face of this mounting confirmation of her own
Darrin M. McMahon 463
mortality. "What matter, that's what I always say, it will have been a
happy day, after all, another happy day." She combs her hair, she brushes
her teeth, she takes pleasure in the distant company of her fading hus-
band. No, she "can't complain." "So much to be thankful for." "No pain."
And though the presence of a revolver in her purse belies this self-as-
surance — as do the silences in her final halting lines —we are not meant,
I think, to doubt the sincerity of her faith: "Oh this is a happy day, this
will have been another happy day! (Pause.) After all. (Pause.) So far."
ing, tragic, and quixotic. But also like them, she is ridiculous, absurd.
the future perfect tense. This will have been a happy day. The future
perfect, it should be clear, is a time that never is, never shall be, and
never was. It only will have been. The future perfect, like the perfect
future, exists only as an act of faith.
The spectator who is amused by the antics of Happy Days will find
humor, too, in the comedie humaine that has succeeded it. For surely there
is something amusing about the frenzy with which men and women have
pursued happiness in the West ever since. If the apparent calm of the
1950s and early 1960s was shattered by the dislocations and upheavals
that followed in the wake of the Kennedy assassination in 1963, the
restless search for happiness as pleasure and good feeling only intensi-
fied. It was in that very year that a little-known advertising executive
by the name of Harvey R. Ball created the first copy of a modern icon
that would compete for prominence in certain quarters with the Cross
and the Star of David. Produced on contract to soothe the anxious work-
ers of the amusingly named State Mutual Life Assurance Company in
lion smiley-face buttons, and today the image adorns T-shirts, statio-
nery, plastic bags, key chains, and car bumpers throughout the world. 11
464 Happiness
And this was only the first crack of a much fuller grin. In magazines
and Hollywood endings, on billboards and TV, people in the West
would be saturated as never before by images of the smiling faces of
"real" people enjoying themselves eternally, as is their right. It is dif-
that images of artificial happiness only reinforce the real sadness, guilt,
the will to good feeling that has continued to propel us forward to the
domestic services, and a thousand other categories over the last one
hundred years is to learn, incontrovertibly, how much better off we
15
are materially than any people in the history of the world. Not only
do we have the means and the wherewithal to entertain ourselves in
infinitely more ways, but we can do so for much longer. The average life
expectancy for men and women in the United States has shot up from
46.3 and 48.3 years, respectively, in 1900 to 74.1 and 79.5 in the year
2000. In the European Union, the average life expectancy in 2002 was
75.5 years for men and 81.6 years for women, an increase of roughly
thirty-three years since the beginning of the twentieth century. 16 Those
who enjoy bemoaning their fate must acknowledge that on average they
can do so for far longer and in far greater comfort than ever before.
And yet to conclude from this data that human beings in the West
are growing progressively happier as a direct result of material and sci-
United States since 1950 show that the number of Americans describ-
ing themselves as "happy" has remained virtually constant at 60 per-
cent, while the number characterizing themselves as "very happy" has
Freud took none of this for granted. But he responded that in terms
of happiness, "most of these satisfactions follow the model of the
'cheap enjoyment' extolled in the anecdote — the enjoyment obtained
by putting a bare leg from under the bedclothes on a cold winter night
and drawing it in again." "If there had been no railway to conquer
distances," Freud continued,
my child would never have left his native town and I should
need no telephone to hear his voice; if traveling across the
take one contemporary advance that both moves us forward and sets
be seen from the figures below. When average national annual income
is plotted against average reported happiness on a graph, the curve
shoots up steeply at first. But then a curious thing occurs; it levels off
somewhere around the $10,000-$ 13,000 mark. After that point, a rise
100
| 95 Iceland
# Sw-<*-n
•
^ Flnland
Aueteila
Norway
U.S-A.'
(0
i ,'iMrt.
Rico Zealand Britain
© 85 Italy, -#
Taiwan South Korea
Colombia France • West
Germany
_Phl.lpp.nj. Japarr% *
BrMJ1 Venezuela
| 80 Auatria
Ghana • Mexico Uruguay
• • East
Nigeria^ r-hin. • m • i Chile
eV _ __ Germany
•
1 75 _ ,
Dom. Hep." Portugal
£ # P-uA • p o»«* Czech
(A lH2.h
* 50 Romania
Georgia •
Lithuania
I 45 Armenia •
0) Bulgaria
Q.
"5 40
c
35 Ukraine q
I • Belarus
|
Moldqvs
30 J L J L J I I L
1000 5000 9000 13000 17000 21000 25000
GNP /capita (World Bank purchasing power parity estimates, 1995 U.S. $)
GNP/Capita
Diminishing happy returns. Figure courtesy of Ronald Ingelhart.
That revealing piece of data has given social scientists great room
to speculate on what does account for the rise and fall of happiness of
cultures after a country has crossed the critical threshold. Why, for
endless —complicated all the more by the fact that such a complex
phenomenon as subjective well-being is decidedly not monocausal.
Sociologists and social scientists, as a consequence, have had a field
day trying to push one pet theory over another. As one might expect,
they have reached no consensus. They probably never will.
of happiness. John Stuart Mill, for one, might take comfort in the fact
that data suggests a link between subjective well-being and various
forms of freedom, even if that data is far from conclusive. 21 Darwin's
contention that family, friendship, and social relations bear strongly
on happiness seems to be borne out by a number of studies, as is the
view expressed by religious observers throughout the ages that there
is a link between happiness and faith. 22 Max Weber might be surprised
to learn that Protestant nations historically report slightly higher levels
Hume, and many others, would feel vindicated by statistics that show
a strong correlation between overall subjective well-being and satis-
do —we should be highly skeptical. Indeed, for reasons that I hope this
phrase, "ordinary." John Stuart Mill put the matter well. In response
to the objection that unhappiness is endemic to life and that there-
fore we should learn to live with it, he answered, "Unquestionably it
gious figures who came before: We are bound to seek the relief of
others' pain.
dar to find happiness on the 30-Day Plan. You can take the short route,
101 Ways to Happiness, or the long route, One Thousand Paths to Happi-
ness, which apparently is an "emerging science." Add up the 1 Strate-
gies for Wealth and Happiness with America's "foremost business
philosopher," or learn to eat to be happy with The Book of Macrobiotics:
The Universal Way of Health, Happiness, and Peace. It is a "proven fact" that
happiness can be found in feng shui astrology, certainly in love, and
most definitely in the power of dianetics. For those who like to go
slower, there are Baby Steps to Happiness, but rest assured that Infinite
Lasts are still within your reach. Happiness Is a Choice, it seems, and
Happiness Is a Choice for Teens. But then again, Happiness Is Your Destiny,
Kitchen in Maine, that you can have Happiness Without Death, Happiness
Without Sex, or happiness in Home Business. There is Compulsory Happi-
ness, Dangerous Happiness, happiness for Black Women Only, and Gay Hap-
piness. And now you needn't confine joy to old standards like cooking
or sex but can experience the Joy of Juicing, the Joy of Not Working, the
Joy of Yiddish, the Joy of Weight Loss, and the joy of almost anything else
you might imagine. In short, Find Happiness in Everything You Do. 29
The very prevalence of these titles is a sign that all is not well. But
imagine what would happen if any of these books were actually to de-
liver what they promise. As the novelist Will Ferguson has speculated
in a wickedly funny satire, Happiness", life as we know it would cease to
exist. Certainly a good many people —from bartenders to therapists to
It is easy, and probably healthy, to laugh. And yet the joke comes at
a price, paid for in pain. In part the necessary expense of the human
creature, who still exists somewhere between beast and god, our suffer-
ing in its current form goes beyond the simple restlessness and anxiety
of longing — the "noble disquiet" that has always haunted human be-
ings. we have steadily added another since the age of
For to that burden
Enlightenment: the unhappiness of not being happy. Collectively, we
possess more than ever before, and still we long, expecting to be happy,
and are saddened when we are not. And though in some respects this
suffering is the ultimate luxury —the indulgence of those whose most
pressing needs have been satisfied — it is, very
for that wide- reason,
spread and acute in the affluent societies of the West. It may be com-
forting for some to believe that the anxious pursuit of happiness is a
But the forces that drive this pursuit are pervasive in Western culture,
and they are being exported rapidly to other parts of the globe. 30
Is not this desperate longing for good feeling — this frantic, frenzied
474 Happiness
"
^Mfe —ii. * ~
-^^*^B^^B
:i
~i
J
1
n
'
© Robert Rauschenberg/Licenced
Jr
byVAGA, New York, NY.
ing life according to virtue or virtues, we must first decide what those
endeavors should be. And that is precisely the problem for many in
the contemporary world who find it hard to set long-term goals other
than good feeling, to chart meaningful narratives that give hope, con-
viction, and purpose to their lives. How ironic in this connection, if
ried out by the behavioral geneticist David Lykken and his Dutch
colleague Auke Tellegen, first published in 1996. 34 Drawing on de-
cades of research, the two men analyzed data pertaining to the long-
term mood, behavior, and character traits of some three thousand
identical and fraternal twins. What they found is that in the case of
identical twins — twins who share an exact genetic endowment
mood, or subjective well-being, was remarkably similar over time, re-
birth. This was not the case with fraternal twins —whose genetic en-
dowment differs — strongly suggesting that genes rather than circum-
late from the data that the degree of the heritability of the set point
of mood might be as high as 80 percent, with Lykken observing else-
where that "trying to be happier is like trying to be taller" — in a
word, pointless. 35
Though he has since qualified that claim —and has
even, amusingly, written a "how-to" book on achieving joy and con-
tentment — his estimation of the heritability of happiness has only
36
grown. "Nearly 100 percent of the variation across people in the
50 percent. Just as Darwin observed that "some dogs and horses are
the futility of striving for too much. In their attempts to put a happy
face on the data, upbeat assessments of this kind tend to obscure the
deeper and more unsettling point: that what the ancient Greeks were
prepared to ascribe, in the wisdom of their ignorance, to the gods,
fortune, the luck of birth, or the simple nature of things may well be
the greatest determinant in shaping our happiness after all. As Lykken
and Tellegen summarized, "We are led to conclude that individual
478 Happiness
people who have suffered needlessly and without other recourse, this
is a development to be welcomed.
But the article in question recounts a different phenomenon: the use
of psychotropic medication not for therapeutic purposes but for lifestyle
enhancement. "Drugs have become like hair products or cosmetics," the
author notes, in what he refers to glibly as "brain styling."
When you relinquish the idea that your moods and weirdnesses
are a constant, not to be messed with, any mental unpleasant-
ness becomes fair game for treatment with a touch of this, a
dards for the world, it is a gauge to be watched. And so when the author
of this piece observes, "The line between medication and recreation
has become blurred," and then asks, "What is really the difference
cal" human balance between pleasure and pain. In the absence of such
a standard, there is every reason to expect that our restless pursuit of
good feeling will exert an ever stronger pressure to define "normal"
happiness upward, pushing the average set point of mood to an ever
play in the market of the mind. The lure of happiness will find a com-
fortable place in the buying and selling of medication to alter mood. It
already has.
The prospect of actually manipulating our genes to enhance our
happiness is admittedly further off —but not that much further. And
here, there will be similar pressures to improve on the handiwork of
nature. For who is to say that another's pain is simply what must be
suffered, that another man, another woman, is, or will be, happy
enough as made? In societies that value happiness in all things, will
480 Happiness
said to have gathered blood from the side of the son of man, it, too,
may exist only in our minds, a deliverance cup and a chalice to hold
our pain. To take that cup — to answer the riddle, to break the spell
would be to sacrifice something of ourselves. We may well discover
that the knights who dare to do so are less like the brave crusaders of
lore than like Cervantes's knight of the sad countenance, Quixote, who
learns at the end of his journeys that the road is better than the arrival.
Acknowledgments
One of the
portunity
great pleasures of writing this book has been the op-
has afforded to talk with people from many differ-
it
ent walks of life about a subject that concerns us all. I recall, with
fondness, the retired diplomat at the Council on Foreign Relations
who recounted to me his perfect moment of happiness: driving
through the former Soviet Union in the 1950s in a plastic convert-
ible. A young scholar from Prague described happiness as an onion:
When you peel it, the center disappears, and when you slice it, you
cry. There was the exotic dancer who mused, while dancing, that
—
Many others regrettably, too many to mention here have shared —
with me their poignant reflections, adding to my insight and to my
stock of happy memories. I am grateful. I am grateful, as well, to John
Merriman, Jon Butler, Jane Levin, Frank Turner, and Maria Rosa
Menocal, who graciously arranged for me to teach at Yale University
New York University a happy place to spend a year, and then some.
The many kind people at the Institut fur die Wissenschaften vom
Menschen in Vienna offered a six-month haven during the upheavals
that followed September 11, providing me with Gemutlichkeit and in-
tellectual sustenance. Pascal Dupuy and his wife, Anne, have long
done the same a la maniere franco -ecossaise. And most recently, my col-
leagues at Florida State University have offered similarly enriching
fare, with a generous helping of southern charm.
Jeanine Pepler memorably helped to get this project off the ground,
and my literary agent and longtime friend, Tina Bennett, has been
quite simply a joy and a marvel to work with in every possible way.
Morgan Entrekin and Stuart Proffitt each provided more publishing
insight and editorial acumen than any young author has the right to
expect, and Brando Skyhorse skillfully shepherded both me and the
manuscript through production. Erich Eichman at the Wall Street Jour-
nal, Alex Starr at the New York Times, Jenny Schuessler at the Boston Globe,
Alessandro Stille at Correspondence magazine, Jim Miller at Daedalus, and
Steven Lagerfeld at the Wilson Quarterly all gave me the opportunity to
work out some of my ideas in print. Peter Buijs of the Jewish Historical
Museum in Amsterdam shared with me his research on Dutch happi-
ness in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, and Professor Jill
Kraye kindly did the same with her work on happiness in the Renais-
sance. Kate M. Ohno, assistant editor of the papers of Benjamin
Franklin at Yale University, aided me with research on Franklin's con-
ception of happiness and also allowed me to consult her own reflec-
tions on the subject, and Joyce Chaplin at Harvard offered timely
advice and valuable insight on Franklin's true thoughts on happiness.
Acknowledgments 483
revisions to the manuscript were carried out in the garden oasis of the
Preface
History and Theory 8 (1969): 3-53. On the history of emotions, see Barbara H.
Rosenwein, "Worrying about Emotions in History," American Historical Review 107
(2002): 821-845, and Peter N. Stearns with Carol Z. Stearns, "Emotionology:
Clarifying the History of Emotions and Emotional Standards," American Historical
Review 90 (1985): 813-816. Both Annabel Temple-Smith, at the University of
Queensland, and Marco Roth, at Yale, are currently writing dissertations on the
role of happiness in literature.
10. Cited in Roy Porter, The Creation of the Modern World: The Untold Story of the
British Enlightenment (New York: Norton, 2000), 88.
Introduction
1. Herodotus, The History, 1.30. All citations from Herodotus are taken from
the fine translation of The History by the late David Grene (Chicago: University of
Chicago Press, 1987).
2. Ibid., 1.33.
3. See Aristotle's allusions in the Nichomachean Ethics, trans. Terence Irwin (In-
dianapolis: Hackett, 1985), 13.44.
4. Cornelius de Heer, Makar, Eudaimon, Olbios, Eutychia: A Study of the Semantic
Field Denoting Happiness in Ancient Greek to the End of the Fifth Century B. C (Amsterdam:
Adolf M. Hakkert, 1969).
5. "Hymn to Apollo," lines 465-466, in the Loeb Classic edition, Hesiod,
sons that I have indicated, however, the use of "happv" is not inappropriate.
14. Ibid., 1.86 and 1.91.
15. Semonides of Amorgos, "The Vanity of Human Wishes," in Greek Lyrics,
trans. Richmond Lattimore, 2nd edition (Chicago: Universitv of Chicago Press,
1960), 11-12.
16. Horner,//^/, 17.446.
17. William Shakespeare, The Taming of the Shrew, act 4, scene 4, final lines. The
speaker is Lucentio.
18. Jackson Lears, Somethingfor Nothing: Luck in America (New York: Viking Press,
2003).
Notes 487
Chapter One
1. Oswyn Murray, "Life and Society in Classical Greece," in John Boardman,
Jasper Griffin, Oswyn Murray, eds., The Oxford History of Greece and the Hellenistic
World (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1988), 244.
2. Donald Kagan, Pericles of Athens and the Birth of Democracy (New York: The
Free Press, 1991), 3-4.
3. Simon Hornblower, "Greece: The History of the Classical Period," in The
Oxford History of Greece, 156-157.
4. Pericles's celebrated "funeral oration" is recorded in Thucydides, The His-
tory of the Peloponnesian War, trans. Richard Crawley (New York: Dutton, 1950),
book 2, chap. 37.
5. Ibid., book 2, chap. 38.
6. Murray, "Life and Society in Classical Greece," in The Oxford History of Clas-
sical Greece, 259.
7. Thucydides, The History of the Peloponnesian War, book 2, chap. 41.
Augustine, Concerning the City of God Against the Pagans, trans. Henry Betton-
8.
488 Notes
17. Cited in Peter Levi, "Greek Drama," in The Oxford History of Greece, 199.
18. Alcman of Sparta, "Maiden Song," in Greek Lyrics, trans. Richard Lattimore,
2nd ed. (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1960), 33-34.
19. Euripides, The Cyclops, lines 495-502.
20. A fine summary of the recent scholarship on the symposium may be found
in Oswyn Murray, ed., Sympotica: A Symposium on the Symposion (Oxford: Clarendon
Press, 1990). See also James N. Davidson, Courtesans & Fishcakes: The Consuming
Passions of Classical Athens (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1998), esp. 43-49.
2 1 Eubulus is cited and discussed along with the tossing of furniture in David-
son, Courtesans & Fishcakes, 47-48.
22. On the hetaera and prostitution in ancient Athens, see Davidson, Courte-
sans and Fishcakes, 73-136.
23. See Davidson, Courtesans & Fishcakes, 312-315. On the range of Greek philo-
sophical responses to the issue of pleasure, see J. C. B. Gosling and C. C. W. Taylor,
The Greeks on Pleasure (Oxford: Clarendon, 1982).
24. Xenophanes of Colophon, "The Well-Tempered Symposium," in Greek Lyr-
ics, IA-1$.
25. Ibid, 25.
26. On Plato's (and Socrates's) general thinking about the institution of the
symposium, see Manuela Tecusan, "Logos Sympotikos: Patterns of the Irrational in
Philosophical Drinking: Plato Outside the Symposium," in Murray, ed., Sympotica,
238-260.
27. Plato, The Protagoras, 347 D, in Gregory R. Crane, ed., The Perseus Project,
http://www.perseus.tufts.edu, February 2005.
28. Plato, Symposium, 180 B.
29. Ibid., 186 B, 188 D-E, 189 D.
30. Ibid., 195 A-B.
31. Ibid., 186 A-B.
32. Ibid., 193 C-D.
33. Ibid., 202 E.
34. Ibid., 203 D-E.
35. Ibid., 203 A.
36. Ibid., 200 E.
37. Ibid., 202 C.
38. Plato, The Republic, trans. G. M. A. Grube and revised by C. D. C. Reeve
(Indianapolis: Hackett, 1992), 490 B.
39. Cited in Peter Gay, Freud: A Life for Our Time (New York: Anchor Books,
1989), 149. The line is taken from the preface to the fourth edition of Freud's Three
Essays, published in 1920.
40. Plato, Symposium, 211 C.
41. Ibid., 211 D. See the Republic, 490 B, and the Phaedrus, Z49-Z51.
42. Plato, Phaedrus, 256.
43. Plato, Symposium, 213 D-216 E, 218 B.
44. Tecusan, "Logos Sympotikos" 241.
45. Plato, Apology, 36 D.
46. Plato, Symposium, 219 C, 221 C-D.
47. Plato, Republic, 559 C, 561 A, and 562 D.
48. This is the phrase of Julia Annas. See her enlightening discussion of Plato,
Notes 489
happiness, and the quest to become godlike in Platonic Ethics, chap. 3, as well as
her general study, The Morality of Happiness (N.Y.: Oxford University Press, 1993).
49. Plato partially acknowledges this dilemma in the Phaedrus, 249-250, where
he attempts to account for it by speaking explicitly of the transmutation of the
soul. All souls,he suggests, have beheld "true being" before passing into human
form. But "all souls do not easily recall the things of the other world." Only those
few who retain glimmer of the light of the former world will thus be drawn to the
a
genuine happiness that is synonymous with the good. This doctrine would be devel-
Sandra Sider (New York: Renaissance Society of America, 1979). For a selection
of the many paintings based on the work, see Reinhold Schleier, Tabula Cebetis
(Berlin: Mann, 1973).
88. Epicurus, "Letter to Menoeceus," in The Essential Epicurus, 68.
Chapter Two
1.Michael Grant and Antonia Mulas, Eros in Pompeii: The Secret Rooms of the
National Museum of Naples (New York: Bonanza Books, 1982), 109.
2. On this theme, I have drawn on the work of David L. Thurmond, Felicitas:
Public Rites of Human Fecundity in Ancient Rome (Ph.D. diss., University of North Caro-
lina at Chapel Hill, 1992), 57-58.
3. See the account in Plutarch, "Sylla," Plutarch s Lives, the Dryden transla-
tion, ed. Arthur Hugh Clough, intro. James Atlas, 3 vols. (New York: Modern Li-
brary, 2001), 1:636.
4.On the goddess Felicitas, see the article "Felicitas" in Charles Daremberg
and Edmund Saglio, eds. Dictionnaire des antiquites grecques et romaines, 5 vols. (Paris:
Notes 491
Hachette, 1877), 1:1031-1032; and J. A. North, Roman Religion (New York: Oxford
University Press, 2000), 32-33.
5. Samuel Ball Platner, The Topography and Monuments of Ancient Rome, 2nd rev.
ed. (Boston: Allyn & Bacon, 1911), 229-230, 394; Samuel Ball Platner, A Topo-
graphical Dictionary of Ancient Rome (London: Oxford University Press, 1929), 207;
Martin Henig and Anthony King, eds. Pagan Gods and Shrines of the Roman Empire
(Oxford: Oxbow Books, 1986), 41.
6. See "Felicitas" in Daremberg and Saglio, eds. Dictionnaire des antiquites, 1 103 1 :
Depending on which of the various Roman calendars one consults, the primary
festival days for Felicitas seem to have been October 9 and July 1.
7. Quintus Horatius Flaccus (Horace), Ode III. 16 (To Maecenas), in The Odes
of Horace, bilingual edition, trans. David Ferry (New York: Farrar, Straus and
Giroux, 1997), 211.
8. Horace, Satire II. 2, in Satires and Epistles, trans, and intro. Niall Rudd (New
York: Penguin Books, 1987), 89.
9. Horace, Epode II (Beatus ille), in Horace: The Complete Odes and Epodes, trans.
David West (New York: Oxford University Press, 1987), 4.
10. Horace, Ode 11.10 (To Licinius), in Odes of Horace, 127.
11. Ibid.
12. Horace, Ode II. 2 (Avarice), in Odes of Horace, 107.
13. Horace, Satire II. 6, in Satires and Epistles, 116.
14. Horace, Ode III. 29 (To Maecenas), in Odes of Horace, 253. 1 have used the
Dryden translation here, in place of that of David Ferry.
15. Horace, Satire II. 6, in Satires and Epistles, 116.
16. Horace, Ode 1.31 (A Prayer), Odes of Horace, 83.
in
17. Horace, Epode XVI (Altera iam territur), in Complete Odes and Epodes, 19.
18. Publius Vergilius Maro (Virgil), Georgics,book 2, in Eclogues, Georgics, Aeneid
1-6, Loeb Classic edition, trans. H. Rushton Fairclough, rev. G. P. Goold (Cam-
bridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1999), 169-171. Virgil's fourth eclogue
contains a similarly lavish picture of the Golden Age.
19. Horace, Satire LI, in Satires and Epistles, 39.
20. Ibid., 43.
21 Augustine, Concerning the City of GodAgainst the Pagans, trans. Henry Bettenson,
intro. John O'Meara (London: Penguin Classics, 1984), 161-162. The worship of
Felicitas is discussed esp. in part 1, book 4, chaps. 18-25.
22. Ibid., 165.
23. My account of Perpetua's life and martyrdom draws heavily on Joyce E.
Salisbury, Perpetuus Passion: The Death and Memory of a Young Roman Woman (New
York: Routledge, 1997) and B. D. Shaw, "The Passion of Perpetua," Past & Present
139 (May 1993): 3-45.
24. To be precise, one should note that in the year 180, twelve Christians were
beheaded for treason by order of the Roman governor in Carthage. They were not,
however, executed in the arena. On the persecutions in general, see the classic
study by W. H. C. Frend, Martyrdom and Persecution in the Early Church: A Study of a
Conflict from the Maccabees to Donatus (New York: Anchor Books, 1967).
25. The "Martyrdom of Saints Perpetua and Felicitas," in The Acts of the Chris-
tian Martyrs, trans, and intro. Herbert Musurillo (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2000),
492 Notes
125-126. The witness was the anonymous editor or author of the account of
Perpetua's last days, and most likely male. See Salisbury, Perpetual Passion, 70, and
B. D. Shaw, "The Passion of Perpetua," esp. 20-21.
26. On Christianity as the "Worship of Sorrow," see Thomas Carlyle, Past and
Present, ed. Richard D. Altick (New York: New York University Press, 1965), 155
(chap. 4, "Happy"). Carlyle also uses the term in a slightly different connection in
Sartor Resartus.
27. 2 Corinthians 6:8-10. All subsequent references to scripture are taken from
the New Revised Standard Version of the Holy Bible (Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 1989), unless otherwise noted. Occasional alterations in the translation,
based on other accredited versions of the text, have been made where indicated.
28. See, for example, the discussion in Martha C. Nussbaum, The Fragility of
Goodness: Luck and Ethics in Greek Tragedy and Philosophy (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1986), 329-333.
29. See the G. Johannes Botterwick and Helmer Ringgren,
article "ashre," in
Theological Dictionary of the Old Testament, trans. John T. Willis, rev. ed. (Grand
Rapids, Mich.: William B. Eerdmans, 1974), 445-446; and David J. A. Clines, ed.
The Dictionary of Classical Hebrew (Sheffield, England: Sheffield Academic Press,
1993), 1:436-437.
30. Similarly, Job declares, "My foot has held fast to [God's] steps; I have kept
his way and have not turned aside" (Job 23:11).
31. '"ashre," in Botterwick and Ringgren, eds. Theological Dictionary of the Old
Testament, 446.
32. Michael Walzer, Exodus and Revolution (New York: Basic Books, 1985), 118.
33. This is from the Syriac Book of Baruch, cited in Walzer, Exodus and Revolu-
tion, \l\-\ll.
"Martyrdom of Saints Perpetua and Felicitas," 107.
34.
See Peter Brown, The Body and Society: Men, Women and Sexual Renunciation in
35.
Early Christianity (New York: Columbia University Press, 1988), 76; and Frederic
J. Baumgartner, Longing for the End: A History of Millennialism in Western Civilization
(New York: St. Martin's Press, 1999), 38-39. Due in large part to its belief that
the Holy Spirit continued to impart new revelations to visionaries, Montanism was
deemed a heresy around the year 200.
36. See Salisbury, Perpetua s Passion, 79-80; and A. J. Droge and James D. Tabor,
A Noble Death: Suicide and Martyrdom Among Christians and Jews in Antiquity (San Fran-
cisco: HarperCollins, 1992).
37. "Martyrdom of Saints Perpetua and Felicitas," 109.
38. Ibid., 111.
39. Ibid., 113.
40. Ibid., 113-115.
41. In addition to the apocryphal Second Book of Esdras, the Shepherd of
Hermas, the Apocalypse of Peter, Enoch, and the Gospel of Thomas, Perpetua and
her community were familiar with the Pentateuch, the letters of Paul, the Book of
Revelations, and probably some of the writings of the apostolic fathers (in particu-
lar those of Tertullian). They probably did not know the canonical Gospels them-
74. Ibid.
75. "Verses of John the Irishman to King Charles," printed in John J. O'Meara,
Eriugena (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1988), 185.
76. in O'Meara, Eriugena, 34.
Cited
77. Emphasis added.
Ibid.
78. Cited in ibid., 39. O'Meara provides a particularly concise and cogent sum-
mary of the predestination controversy on pp. 32-51. See, as well, Dermot Moran,
The Philosophy of John Scottus Eriugena: A Study of Idealism in the Middle Ages (Cam-
bridge: Cambridge University Press, 1989), 27-35.
79. Pseudo-Dionysius, The Mystical Theology, in Pseudo-Dionysius: The Complete
Works, trans. Colm Luibheid and Paul Rorem (New York: Paulist Press, 1987), 135.
80. The words are those of the seventeenth-century English hermit and poet
Thomas Traherne. They serve as the epigraph to Isabel Colegate's A Pelican in the
Wilderness: Hermits, Solitaries, and Recluses (Washington, D.C.: Counterpoint, 2002).
81. Cited in Caroline Walker Bynum's magisterial Holy Feast and Holy Fast: The
Religious Significance of Food to Medieval Women (Berkeley: University of California
Press, 1987), 36.
82. Cited in ibid., 50.
83. This is a line from the Roman Catholic Mass that is still in use today.
84. See Louis Dupre and James A. Wiseman, eds. Lightfrom Light: An Anthology
of Christian Mysticism, 2nd ed. (New York: Paulist Press, 2001); and Dom Cuthbert
Butler, Western Mysticism: The Teaching of Augustine, Gregory ami Bernard on Contempla-
tion and the Contemplative Life, 3rd ed. (New York: Barnes and Noble, 1967), 6.
85. Boethius, The Consolation of Philosophy, trans, and intro. P. G. Walsh (New
York: Oxford University Press, 1999), 22.
86. Ibid., 22, 51.
105. Aquinas, Summa contra Gentiles, book 3, chap. 48; Summa Theologiae, first
part of part 2, question 3, in St. Thomas Aquinas on Politics and Ethics, trans, and ed.
Paul E. Sigmund (New York: W. W. Norton, 1988). All subsequent references to
the Summa Contra Gentiles and the Summa Theologiae are to this edition unless
otherwise noted.
106. The citation from Corinthians here is from the translation of the King
James Bible.
107. Summa contra
Gentiles, book 3, chap. 63.
496 Notes
Chapter Three
1 Lotario dei Seigni, DeMiseria Condicionis Humane, ed. Robert E. Lewis (Ath-
ens, Ga.: University of Georgia Press, 1978), 94. Lewis's fine edition contains both
the Latin original and an English translation. I have made slight changes to the
English rendering where I have seen fit.
4. Ibid., 204.
5. Ibid., 102. Lucretius makes a similar observation about babies in his De
Rerum Natura.
6. Ibid., 124.
See Jean Delumeau's discussion of the Imitation of Christ in his Sin and Fear:
7.
The Emergence of a Western Guilt Culture, 13th-18th Centuries, trans. Eric Nicholson
(New York: St. Martin's Press, 1999), 23-24; and more generally his treatment of
Renaissance bleakness in part 1, "Pessimism and the Macabre in the Renaissance,"
chaps. 1-5.
8. Seigni, De Miseria Condicionis Humane, 92.
9. The title of William G. Craven's Giovanni Pico della Mirandola, Symbol of His
Age: Modern Interpretations of a Renaissance Philosopher (Geneva: Droz, 1981) is alto-
gether representative in this respect.
10. Pico della Mirandola, "On the Dignity of Man," trans. Charles Glenn Wallis,
in On the Dignity of Man, ed. Paul J. W. Miller (Indianapolis: Hackett, 1998), 34.
11. See, for example, S. Dresden, Humanism in the Renaissance, trans. Margaret
King (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1968).
Notes 497
18. Ibid., 6.
19. Ibid., 7.
20. See, for example, Delumeau, Sin and Fear, 18-25; and Charles Trinkaus, In
Our Image and Likeness: Humanity and Divinity in Italian Humanist Thought, 2 vols. (Lon-
don: Constable & Co., 1970), 1:174, 320.
21. Pico della Mirandola, Heptaplus, trans. Douglas Carmichael, in Miller, ed.
On the Dignity of Man, 125-126.
22. Ibid., 144. The citation is from 2 Corinthians 3:5: "Not that we are com-
petent of ourselves to claim anything as coming from us; our competence is from
."
God. . .
likely the work of Theophrastus. See Hellmut Flashar, Melancholie und Melancholiker
in den medizinischen Theorien der Antike (Berlin: De Gruyter, 1966), 60-62.
50. Marsilio Ficino, The Book of Life {Liber de Vita), trans. Charles Boer (Wood-
stock, Conn.: Spring Publications, 1994), 8. The full title of the more literal Ital-
52. John Hale, The Civilization of Europe in the Renaissance (New York: Atheneum,
1994), 463.
53. Robert Burton, The Anatomy of Melancholy, ed. and intro. Holbrook Jackson
and William H. Gass (New York: New York Review of Books, 2001), 20, 120-121.
54. See the concise account in Colleen McDannell and Bernhard Lang, Heaven:
A History (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 2001), esp. chap. 5, "The
Pleasures of Renaissance Paradise."
55. Lorenzo Valla, De Voluptate, On Pleasure (later entitled On the True and False
Good), trans. A. Kent Hieatt and Maristella Lorch, intro. Maristella de Panizza
Lorch (New York: Abaris, 1977), 305.
56. Ibid., 305, 317.
57. Erasmus, Praise of Folly, trans. Betty Radice, intro. A.H. T. Levi (New York:
Penguin, 1971), 78. The
borrowed from Sophocles's play Ajax.
line is
58. See Erasmus, the Enchiridion; or, Handbook of the Militant Christian, trans, and
intro. John P. Dolan (Notre Dame, Ind.: Fides Publishers, 1962), esp. 75-79, "The
Crown of Wisdom Is that You Know Yourself." The reference to "Saint Socrates"
appears in the 1522 colloquy Convivium religiosum.
book 2, 90-98.
61. Martin Luther to Prince Joachim of Anhalt, May 23, 1534, cited and trans-
lated in Preserved Smith, The Life and Letters of Martin Luther (Boston: Houghton
Mifflin, 1911), 322-333. 1 have altered Smith's translation in keeping with the origi-
nal in D. Martin Luthers Werke: Kritische Gesamtausgabe, 69 vols. (Weimar: Hermann
Bohlan, 1883), 7:65-67.
62. Luther, Sermon for the 19th Sunday after Trinity; Matthew 9: 1-8, in the Ser-
mons of Martin Luther, 5 vols. (Grand Rapids, Mich.: Baker Book House, 1983), 5:198.
63. The classic text is Erik Erikson, Young Man Luther: A Study in Psychoanalysis
and History (New York: W. Norton, 1958). W
64. See Diarmaid MacCulloch, The Reformation: A History (New York: Viking
Penguin, 2003), esp. 119-120.
65. Luther, "Preface to the Complete Edition of Luther's Latin Works"
(1545), Luther's Works, eds. Jaroslav Pelikan and Helmut I. Lehman, 55 vols.
(Saint Louis: Concordia Publishing, 1955-1986), 34:336-337. 1 have altered this
translation slightly in places, based on the "Vorrede zum ersten Bande der
Gesamtausgaben seiner lateinischen Schriften Wittenberg 1545," in Luthers
Werke, 54:176-187.
66. See Carter Lindberg, The European Reformations (Oxford: Blackwell, 1996),
67-68.
67. Luther, "Preface to the Complete Edition of Luther's Latin Works" (1545),
Luthers Works, 34:337. I have altered this translation slightly.
68. Luther, "Vorrede auff die Epistel S. Paul: an die Romer," in D. Martin
Luther: Die gantze Heilige Schrifft 1545 Deudsch auffs new zugerich, eds. Hans Volz and
Heinz Blanke, 3 vols. (Munich: Roger & Bernhard, 1972), 2: 2254-2268, as trans-
lated by Brother Andrew Thornton at the Project Wittenberg site: http://www.
iclnet.org/pub/resources/text/wittenberg/german.bible/rom-eng.txt.
500 Notes
69. See the "Freedom of a Christian Man," in Luther's Works, 31 :360; and "Pref-
ace to the Complete Edition of Luther's Latin Works," in Luther's Works, 34:337.
70. Martin Luther, The Large Catechism ( 1 530) comment on the fifth command-
,
ment. The full text is What Does This Mean?: Luther s Catechism Today,
reproduced in
Revolution (London: Penguin, 1999; 1972). Professor Hill draws his title from a con-
temporary broadside ballad, "The World Turned Upside Down," published in 1646.
94. Cited in Hill, World, 339-340. This same citation prompted the eminent
scholar Michael Walzer to muse in passing that "perhaps happiness is simply the
secularized version of religious joy." Exodus and Revolution (New York: Basic Books,
1985), 106-106. Even if only in passing, Professor Walzer had hit upon a profound
insight.
95. Thomas Brooks, Heaven on Earth; or, A Serious Discourse Touching a Weil-
Grounded Assurance of Men s Everlasting Happiness and Blessedness (London, 1657), Pref-
ace (exact page numbers obscured).
96. Robert Crofts, The Way to Happinesse on Earth Concerning Riches, Honour,
Conjugal/'Love, Eating, Drinking(London, 1641).
97. Given the importance of happiness as a concept in subsequent Western
political thought, a careful study of the use of the term in the context of the En-
glish civil war and the English revolution would make a fine project for an enter-
prising graduate student.
98. Richard Holdsworth, The Peoples Happinesse. A Sermon Preached in St. Maries
in Cambridge, Upon the 21 of March, being the day of His Majesties Happy Inauguration
(Cambridge: Roger Daniel, 1642), 2, 5-6. Holdsworth was master of Emmanuel
College and vice chancellor of the university.
99. The argument for this connection is made most forcefully by Richard
Ashcraft, Revolutionary Politics and Locke s Two Treatises of Government (Princeton, N.J.:
Princeton University Press, 1994).
100. Peter Laslett, Introduction to John Locke, The Two Treatises of Government,
502 Notes
and part 1, chap. 6, 34-35. On Hobbes's statements on good and evil, see part 1,
chap. 6, 28-29.
116. Locke, Essay Concerning Human Understanding, 262.
117. Ibid., 263. See also 254 ("For as much as whilst we are under any uneasi-
ness, we cannot apprehend ourselves happy, or on the way to it.") and 273.
118. John Locke, Some Thoughts Concerning Education, eds. Ruth W. Grant and
Nathan Tarcov (Indianapolis: Hackett, 1996), 10.
119. Cited in Roy Porter, The Creation of the Modern World: The Untold Story of the
British Enlightenment (New York: W. W. Norton, 2000), 100.
120. Locke, Two Treatises, 338 (chap. 8, para. 107). On this theme of "political
happiness," see also Locke's reflections in his minor essay "Civil and Ecclesiasti-
cal Power" (1674), in Locke, Political Essays, 216-221.
John Locke, A Letter Concerning Toleration, in Political Writings of John
121 Locke,
ed. and intro. David Wootton (New York: Mentor Books, 1993), 407.
122. Ibid., 411.
123. Richard Allestree, The Art of Contentment (Oxford, 1675), Preface (pages
unnumbered).
124. Ibid., and 1-2.
125. Ibid., and 2-3.
126. Ann Thompson, The Art of Suffering and the Impact of Seventeenth-Century Anti-
Providential Thought (Aldershot, Hampshire: Ashgate Publishing, 2003), 170. Pro-
fessor Thompson discusses Allestree's work in particular in the context of this
reconceptualization, showing how the "doctrine of contentment" and the "art of
contentment" evolved as a broader theme in seventeenth-century English theology.
127. Edmund Calamy, The Happinesse of those who Sleep in Jesus; or, the Benefit that
Comes to the Dead Bodies of the Saints Even While They are in the Grave, Sleeping in Jesus
. (London: J.H. for Nathanael Webb, 1662).
.
1 28. A Persuasive to a Holy Life from the Happiness that Attends it Both in
John Ray,
this and in the World to Come (London: Sam Smith, 1700); Thomas Tryon, The
World,
Way to Health, LongLife and Happiness; or, A Discourse of Temperance 2nd ed. (Lon- . . . ,
don: H. C. Baldwin, 1691); England's Happiness Improved; or, An Infallible way to get
Riches, Encr'ease Plenty, and Promote Pleasure (London: Roger Clavill, 1697).
Notes 503
Le bonheur de ce monde
Avoir une maison commode, propre et belle,
Un jardin tapisse d'espaliers odorans,
Des fruits, d'excellent vin, peu de train, peu d'enfans,
Posseder seul sans bruit une femme fidele,
135. Jonson cited in Rostvig, The Happy Man, 324. The discussion of English
poetry that follows is indebted to Professor Rostvig's fine analysis.
136. Hall cited in ibid., 140.
137. Herrick cited in ibid., 303.
138. Wycherley cited in ibid., 380.
Chapter Four
1 Cited in Jean Delumeau, History of Paradise: The Garden of Eden in Myth & Tra-
dition, trans. Matthew O'Connell (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1992), 168.
2. Cited in ibid., 145.
3. Voltaire, Le Mondain (1736). The last four lines of the poem read:
Hell, see the standard account by D. P. Walker, The Decline of Hell (Chicago: Uni-
versity of Chicago Press, 1964).
5. On the English pleasure gardens, see Roy Porter, Enlightenment: Britain and
the Creation of the Modern World (London: Penguin, 2000), 269-270. On the Palais
Royal, see Darrin M. McMahon, "The Birthplace of the Revolution: Public Space
and Political Community in The Palais-Royal of Louis-Philippe-Joseph d'Orleans,"
French History 10, no. 1 (March 1996).
6. Pope, Essay on Man, Epistle 4.
amples of the phrase the "right to happiness," see Anne Robert Jacques Turgor,
Deuxieme lettre sur la tolerance (Paris, 1754), and Guillaume Thomas- Frangois Raynal,
Histoire philosophique et politique des etablissements et du commerce des Europeens dans les
deuxlndes, 10 vols. (Geneva, 1780), 9:232.
8. For a general introduction to this vast literature, see Robert Mauzi, Videe
du bonheur dans la litterature et la pensee francaises auXVIIIe siecle (Paris: Albin Michel,
1994), and Paul Hazard, European Thought in the Eighteenth Century: From Mon-
tesquieu to Lessing, trans. J. Lewis May (Cleveland, Ohio: Meridian, 1969; 1946),
14-26.
9. Hazard, European Thought, 17.
10. See A. Programme dune Fete Allegorique representee par le Corps des
P. Pochet,
Nobles Cadets de terre de St. Petersbourg, a roccasion de la paix de 1115 avec la Cour
Ottomane, contained in the French National Archives, AN F 1C I 85. The celebra-
tions took place in 1778.
11. Marquise du Chatelet, Discours sur le bonheur, intro. Elizabeth Badinter
(Pairs: Editions Payot & Rivages, 1997), 32.
12. For an insightful rumination on these questions of happiness applied
specifically to the case of women, see Cornelia Klinger, "Vom Schwierig-Werden
der Frage des Glucks in einer Zeit ohne Sinn und Ziel," L'Homme: Zeitschrift fiir
Feministische Geschichtswissenschaft 10, no. 2 (1999): 173-192.
13. William Paley, Natural Theology (London: Wilks and Taylor, 1802), 490.
14. [A. J. Durand], Je Veux etre heureux. Entretiens familiers sur la religion (Paris,
20. Turgot cited in Emma Rothschild, Economic Sentiments: Adam Smith, Condorcet,
and the Enlightenment (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University, Press, 2001), 242.
21. Thomas Hobbes, Leviathan, with selected variants from the Latin edition
of 1668, ed. Edwin Curley (Indianapolis: Hackett, 1994), part 1, chap. 11, 57-58.
22. Porter, Enlightenment, 22.
23. Denis Diderot, Plan d'une universite pour le governement de Russie, in Oeuvres
completes, eds. Jules Assezat and Maurice Tourneux, 20 vols. (Paris: Gamier, 1875—
1877), 3:477.
24. See the classic account of Peter Gay, The Enlightenment: An Interpretation
(New York: Knopf, 1966-69), esp. vol. 1, The Rise of Modern Paganism.
25. Epicurus, "Vatican Sayings," no. 56, in The Essential Epicurus: Letters, Principal
Doctrines, Vatican Sayings, and Fragments, trans, and ed. Eugene O'Connor (Amherst,
N.Y.: Prometheus, 1993), 82.
Marquise du Chatelet, Discours sur le bonheur, 32-33.
26.
words and reactions are cited and discussed in Bronislaw Baczko,
27. Voltaire's
Job, Mon Ami. Promesses du bonheur et fatalite du mal (Paris: Gallimard, 1997), 17ff.
28. Vico's ScienzaNuova (The New Science) was first published in 1725. Vico's
work, however, was almost totally unknown beyond his immediate circle until the
nineteenth century.
29. Jeremy Bentham, "Preface to the first edition," A Fragment on Government,
in A Bentham Reader, Mary Peter Mack (New York: Pegasus, 1969), 45.
ed.
30. See Robert Shackleton, "The Greatest Happiness of the Greatest Number:
The History of Bentham's phrase," Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century 90, ed.
Theodore Besterman (Oxford: Voltaire Foundation, 1972), 1461-1482; Joachim
Hruschka, "The Greatest Happiness Principle and Other Early German Anticipa-
tions of Utilitarian Theory," Utilitas3, no. 2 (November 1991): 165-177; and David
Blumenfield, "Perfection and Happiness in the Best Possible World," in Nicholas
Jolley, ed. The Cambridge Companion to Leibniz (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1995), 381-410.
31 Garry Wills, Inventing America: Jefferson s Declaration of Independence (New York:
Vintage Books, 1978), 150-151.
32. Hutcheson cited in Shackleton, "The Greatest Happiness of the Greatest
Number," 1466-1467.
33. Hutcheson's formulas cited in Wills, Inventing America, 149.
34. [Benjamin Stillingfleet], Irenaeus Kranzovius, Some Thoughts Concerning
Happiness . . . translated from the Original German (London: Printed for W. Webb,
1738).
35. Ibid., 5, 11.
36. Cesare Beccaria, On Crimes and Punishment, trans, and intro. David Young
(Indianapolis: Hackett, 1986), 5, 14.
37. It should be noted that Nicolas-Antoine Boulanger in Despotisme orientale
( 1 755) Voltaire in Essaisur les moeurs
, ( 1 756) and Adam Ferguson in An Essay on the
,
History of Civil Society (1767) also touched on themes relating to the history of hap-
piness as conceived by Chastellux, albeit less explicitly.
38. Francois Jean, Marquis de Chastellux, Dela Felicite publique, ou Considerations
sur le sort des Hommes dans les differentes epoques de I'histoire, 2 vols. (Amsterdam: Chez
Marc-Michel Rey, 1772), 1:9.
506 Notes
40. Paul Henri Thiry, Baron d'Holbach, Common Sense, or Natural Ideas Opposed
to Supernatural (Ml 2), in Isaac Kramnick, ed. The Portable Enlightenment (New York:
Penguin, 1995), 145.
41. Ironically, when, at the turn of the eighteenth century, the British demog-
rapher Thomas Malthus sought to argue that overpopulation was the principal threat
to modern societies, he retained the link to happiness, entitling the second edi-
tion of his Essay on the Principle of Population, A View of Its Past and Present Effects on
Human Happiness (London: Royal Economic Society, 1803).
42. Most famously, David Hume in his "Essay on the Populousness of Ancient
Nations" (1742).
43. Helvetius, Le Bonheur, in Oeuvres, 13:90.
Jeremy Bent ham, Deontology, 1.4, in Deontology Together with a Table of the
44.
Springs of Action and the Article on Utilitarianism, ed. Amnon Goldworth (Oxford:
Clarendon Press, 1983), 134 and n. 2. Voltaire makes the same observation in his
article "Bien, Souverain bien," in the Philosophical Dictionary of 1764.
45. Chastellux, De la Felicite publique, 2:10 and 2:54.
46. Bentham cited in Ross Harrison, Bentham (London: Routledge & Kegan
Paul, 1983), 38.
47. Abbe Pestre, "Bonheur," 322.
Bentham, A Fragment on Government, "Preface to the first edition," 51.
48.
49. Bentham, An Introduction to the Principles of Morals and Legislation, eds. J. H.
Burns and H. L. A. Hart, intro. F. Rosen (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1996), 11
(chap. 1, section 1).
60. On the subject of happiness in the Dutch Republic during the age of
Enlightenment, see Peter Buijs, "De mens is tot geluk geschapen. Naar een
geschiedenis van het geluk in de republiek ten tijde van de Verlichting," Tijdschrift
voor Geschiedenis 108, no. 2 (1995): 188-208.
61. Jonathan I. Israel, Radical Enlightenment: Philosophy and the Making of Moder-
nity 1650-1150 (New York: Oxford University Press, 2001), 708-709.
62. Julien Offray de la Mettrie, Man A Machine, trans. Richard A. Watson and
Maya Rybalka (Indianapolis: Hackett, 1994), 36.
63. Ibid., 32, 65, 50, 41,75.
64. Ibid., 59.
65. Ibid., 29-30.
66. Ibid., 53.
67. Ibid., 58.
68. La Mettrie, UAnti-Seneque, ou Discours sur le bonheur, in Oeuvres, 2:263.
69. Ibid., 2:286.
70. La Mettrie, Systeme de Epicure, in Oeuvres, 1:380. See also L'Art de Jouir
(1751).
71. Giacomo Casanova, History of My Life, trans. Willard R. Trask, 12 vols. (Bal-
timore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1966), 2:14. 1 have altered Trask's trans-
lation slightly.
72. Ibid., 3:194-195.
73. Donatien-Alphonse-Francois de Sade, "Dialogue Between a Priest and a
Dying Man," in Justine, Philosophy in the Bedroom, and Other Writings, trans, and ed.
Richard Seaver and Austryn Wainhouse (New York: Grove Weidenfeld, 1965), 174.
74. Sade, Philosophy in the Bedroom, in ibid., 185.
See the discussion in Charles Taylor, Sources of the Self: The Making ofthe Mod-
75.
ern Identity (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1989), 339 and more
generally, 328-340.
76. I make this argument at greater length in my article "From the Happiness
of Virtue to the Virtue of Happiness 400 B.C.-A.D. 1780," Daedalus 133, no. 2
(Spring 2004).
77. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Reveries of a Solitary Walker, trans, and intro. Peter
France (New York: Penguin, 1979), 81-83.
78. Ibid., 88-89.
79. Philipp Balthasar Sinold von Schiitz, Die gliickseligste Insul auf der ganzen Welt,
oder Das Land der Zufriedenheit (Frankfurt, 1 728).
Rousseau speaks often of Robinson Crusoe in his treatise on education, Emile;
80.
or, On Education, intro. and trans. Allan Bloom (New York: Basic Books, 1979).
81. Frost's two-line poem "An Answer" is cited in Sergio Perosa, From Island to
Portraits: Four Literary Variations (Amsterdam: IOS Press, 2000), 2. 1 am grateful to
Professor Perosa for sharing this work with me.
82. Rousseau, Reveries, 88.
83. Rousseau, Emile, 447.
84. Rousseau, Political Fragments, part 6 ("On Public Happiness"), section 3, in
The Collected Writings of Rousseau, eds. Roger D. Masters and Christopher Kelly, trans.
Judith R. Bush, Roger D. Masters, and Christopher Kelly, 8 vols. (Hanover, N.H.:
University Press of New England, 1994), 4:40. On Rousseau's understanding
of happiness in general, see Stephen G. Slakeve, "Rousseau & the Concept of
508 Notes
Happiness," Journal'of the Northeastern Political Science Association 11 (Fall 1978): 27-
45,and Ronald Grimsley, "Rousseau and the Problem of Happiness," Hobbes and
Rousseau: A Collection of Critical Essays, eds. Maurice Cranston and Richard S. Peters
(New York: Anchor Books, 1972), 437-461.
85. Rousseau, Reveries, 87-88.
86. Ibid.
87. Rousseau, Emile, 442.
88. Rousseau, First Discourse {Discourse on the Arts and Sciences) in The Basic Po-
litical Writings, trans. Donald A. Cress, intro. Peter Gay (Indianapolis: Hackett,
1987), 19.
89. Rousseau, The Second Discourse {Discourse on the Origin and Foundations of In-
equality Among Men) , in Basic Political Writings, 81.
90. Rousseau, Reveries, 133.
91. Rousseau, Lettres morales, in Oeuvres completes, eds. Bernard Gagnebin and
Marcel Raymond, 5 vols. (Paris: Gallimard, 1969), 4:1112 (Letter 6).
92. Blaise Pascal, Pensees, ed. Louis Lafuma (Paris: Editions du Seuil, 1962),
298 (fragment #688).
93. Rousseau, Emile, 442.
94. Rousseau, Emile, 80-81. See, similarly, Political Fragments, part 6, 40, and
Second Discourse, part 1.
95. Ibid.
96. Rousseau, Emile, 81-82 and 446.
97. Rousseau, On the Social Contract; or, Essay about the Form of the Republic (first
1 14. The phrase is that of the English poet Thomas Gray, although the thought
behind it is very old. See Mark Lilla, "Ignorance and Bliss," The Wilson Quarterly 25,
no. 3 (Summer 2001): 64-75.
115. Voltaire, "The Story of a Good Brahmin" (1759), in The Portable Voltaire
(New York: Penguin, 1977), 436-438.
116. Immanuel Kant, Groundwork for the Metaphysics of Morals, trans. James W.
Ellington (Indianapolis: Hackett, 1981), 8-9.
117. Ibid., 46.
118. Ibid.
119. Immanuel Kant, Critique of Pure Reason (1781, 1787), unified edition, trans.
Werner S. Pluhar, intro. Patricia Kitcher (Indianapolis: Hackett, 1996), 736-737.
120. Ibid., 742. In general, see the section "On the Ideal of the Highest Good,
as a Determining Basis of the Ultimate Basis of Pure Reason."
A Modern Rite
Greer places the number of death sentences handed down by the revolutionary
tribunal of Rochefort between November 1793 and February 1794 at forty. See
also Jacques Duguet et al., La Revolution francaise a Rochefort, 1189-1199 (Poitiers:
Projets Editions, 1989), 74.
8. "Lequinio, Joseph-Marie," in Michaud, Biographie Universale, 24:243-244.
9. Maximilien Robespierre, "Sur l'inculpation de dictature" (25 Septembre
1792), cited in F. Theuriot, "La conception robespierriste du bonheur," Annales
historiques de la revolution francaise 1 92 ( 1 968) 216.
:
10. Systeme de denominations topographiques pour les places, rues, quais, etc. de toutes
les communes de la Republique, par le Citoyen Gregoire (Paris: Imprimerie National,
n.d. [pluviose, year 2]), 14. See also, Branislaw Baczko, "From the Place de la
Revolution to the Place du Bonheur: The Imaginary Paris of the Revolution,"
510 Notes
Utopian Lights: The Evolution of the Idea of Social Progress, trans. Judith L. Greenberg
(New York: Paragon House, 1989), 280-365.
11. The undated letter from Pochet to Citoyen Benezeque can be found in the
French National Archives, F/lcI/85. The decree of the national convention of
18 Floreal, Year II, instituting the "Fetes decadaires" and listing their individual
themes, can be found in F/lcl/84.
12. "Rapport au nom du comite de salut public, sur le mode d'execution du
decret contre les ennemis de la revolution, presente a la convention nationale,"
13 Ventose an II (March 3, 1794), in Oeuvres completes de Saint-Just, ed. Michele
Duval (Paris: Editions Gerard Lebovici, 1984), 715.
13. On the influence of antiquity on the attitudes and aesthetics of the revo-
lutionaries, see Mona Ozouf, Festivals and the French Revolution, trans. Alan Sheridan
(Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1988), 5, 52-53, 273-275; H. T.
Parker, The Cult of Antiquity and the French Revolutionaries (Chicago: University of
Chicago Press, 1937); as well as Lynn Hunt's classic, Politics, Culture, and Class in the
French Revolution (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1984).
14. Saint-Just, "Rapport au nom du comite de salut public sur les factions de
l'etranger," 23 Ventose an II (March 13, 1794), in Oeuvres completes, 729-730.
15. Lequinio, "Du bonheur," 21-22.
16. Ibid., 18-19.
17. Emile Durkheim, The Elementary Forms of Religious Life, trans, and intro.
Karen E. Fields (New York: Free Press, 1995).
18. Mona Ozouf, "The Revolutionary Festival: A Transfer of Sacrality," chap. 10
Chapter Five
1. Napoleon Bonaparte, Discoursde Napoleon sur les veriteset les sentiments quilimporte
le plus aux hommes pour leur bonheur (Paris: Baudouin Freres, 1826), 42-43.
d'inculquer
2. Cited in Andy Martin, "Napoleon on Happiness," Raritan 19, no. 4 (Spring
2000), 96.
3. Napoleon, Discours de Napoleon, 36-39.
Notes 511
17. Keats to Benjamin Bailey, November 22, 1817, in The Letters of John Keats, ed.
Hyder E. Rollins, 2 vols. (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press , 1958), 1:186.
18. Wordsworth, "The Prelude," Book 2, lines 448ff.
19. Shelley to Lord Byron, September 8, 1816, cited in Abrams, Natural Super-
naturalism, 328.
de Musset, La Confession d'un enfant du siecle, in Oeuvres completes en prose,
20. Alfred
eds. Maurice Allem and Paul Courant (Paris: Gallimard, 1960), 78. This autobio-
graphical work was first published in 1835.
21. Byron, "Childe Harold's Pilgrimage," Canto the Third, XXXIV.
22. Emerson cited in Andrew Delbanco, The Real American Dream: A Meditation
on Hope (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1999), 51.
23. Friedrich Schiller, On the Aesthetic Education of Man in a Series of Letters, trans.
512 Notes
trenchant essay "The Fate of Pleasure," in Beyond Culture: Essays on Literature and
Learning (New York: Viking Press, 1965; 1955).
30. Byron cited The Gloomy Egoist, 321.
in Sickels,
Why, and Whither the Scowl?" in Scott Burnham and Michael P. Steinberg, eds.
Beethoven and His World (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 2000), 309,
n. 1. The account of Beethoven that follows draws heavily on Professor Comini's
wonderful article.
514 Notes
82. The line from Stendhal can be found in his On Love. Baudelaire cites him,
with minor reservations, in the section "Beauty, Fashion, and Happiness," in The
Chapter Six
1 The Path to Riches and Happiness, by the late Doctor Benjamin Franklin (Dublin:
William Watson, n.d. [1800]).
2. On God's desire that human beings be happy, see esp. Franklin's "Articles
of Belief and Acts of Religion" (1728), in Benjamin Franklin, Autobiography and Other
Writings, ed. Russell B. Nye (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1949), 163-165.
3. Cited in William Temple Franklin, Memoirs of the Life and Writings of Ben-
jamin Franklin, 3 (London, 1817-1818), 2:94-95.
vols.
Lemay and P. M. Zall (New York: W. W. Norton, 1986), 108 (part 3).
7. Franklin, "Poor Richard Improved, 1 755," in Writings, 1283. "Content is the
10. On the making of a specifically American "civil or civic religion," see the
provocative new history by Walter A. McDougal, Freedom Just Around the Corner: A
New American History 1585-1828 (New York: HarperCollins, 2004), esp. 321-370.
11. Jan Lewis, "Happiness," in The Blackwell Encyclopedia of the American Revolu-
tion, eds. Jack P. Green and J. R. Pole (Cambridge, England: Blackwell, 1994), 641.
On the discussion of happiness in America, see also Ursula M. von Eckardt, The
Pursuit of Happiness in the Democratic Creed: An Analysis of Political Ethics (New York:
Frederick Praeger, 1959).
12. Thomas Jefferson
to Henry Lee, May 8, 1825, in The Basic Writings of Thomas
Foner (New York: Halcyon House, 1950), 802.
Jefferson, ed. Philip S.
13. On the range of these positions, see Lewis, "Happiness," 642-643.
14. Locke, An Essay Concerning Human Understanding, ed. Peter H. Nidditch (Ox-
ford: Clarendon Press, 1975), 269.
15. Mason cited in Jones, Pursuit of Happiness, 12. On Jefferson's knowledge of
Mason's draft of the Virginia Declaration of Rights and its relationship to the
Declaration of Independence, see Pauline Maier, American Scripture: Making the
Declaration of Independence (New York: Vintage, 1997), 125-134.
16. James Otis cited in Ibid., 4.
Notes 515
(Boston: S. Kneeland, 1751), 3, 11; Robert Breck, The Only Method to Promote the
Happiness ofa People and their Posterity, a Sermon preached before the Honourable the Lieut.
Govemour, the Council, and Representatives of the Province of the Massachusetts Bay in New-
England, May 29th 1128 (Boston: B. Green, 1728), 22.
23. Noah Hobart, Civil Government, the Foundation of Social Happiness, A Sermon
Preached before the General Assembly of the Colony of Connecticut, at Hartford, on the Day of
Their Anniversary Election, May 10th, 1150 (New London: T. Green, 1751), 3, 6-7,
24-25.
24. Benjamin Lord, Religion and Government subsisting together in Society, Necessary
Compleat Happiness and Safety, a Sermon Delivered in the Audience of the General
to their
Assembly of the Colony of Connecticut, on their Anniversary Election at Hartford, May 9th,
1151 (New London: Timothy Green, 1752).
25. Samuel Dunbar, The Presence of God with His People, their Only Safety and Hap-
piness. A Discourse delivered at Boston in thepresence of His Excellency the Govemour, Thomas
Pownall, esq. . . . (Boston: S. Kneeland, 1760).
26.True Pleasure, Chearfulness, and Happiness, The Immediate Consequence of Religion
and concisely proved (Philadelphia: William and Thomas Bradford, 1767), 12.
fully
The author of this amusing work points out that Christ performed his first miracle,
turning water into wine, at a wedding feast where "jollity and joy" was the domi-
nant mood. The choice, it seems, was significant, for "he who condescended to
work a miracle upon such an occasion, cannot be justly imagined to have been a
gloomy, melancholy spectator only, of such joy and happiness."
Adams cited in Jones, Pursuit of Happiness, 68. Interestingly, Adams also ob-
27.
serves,"We too often mistake our true happiness, and when we arrive to the en-
joyment of that which seemed to promise it to us, we find that it is all an imaginary
dream, at best fleeting and transitory."
28. Jefferson to Dr. Joseph Priestley, April 9, 1803.
29. Jefferson to Benjamin Waterhouse, June 26, 1822, in Basic Writings, 114.
30. These include Bernard Bailyn, J. G. A. Pocock, Gordon Wood, and Lance
Banning.
31 Jefferson to William Short, October 3 1 , 1 8 1 9, in Basic Writings, 764. Jefferson
continued, "I consider the genuine (not the imputed) doctrines of Epicurus as
containing everything rational in moral philosophy which Greece and Rome have
left us."
32. The case for Hutcheson's influence is made most forcefully in Wills, In-
venting America, esp. 149-164 and 240-255. On the importance of Burlamaqui, see
Morton White, The Philosophy of the American Revolution (New York: Oxford Univer-
sity Press, 1978).
33. in Charles Taylor, Sources of the Self: The Making of Modern
Hutcheson cited
Identity(Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1989), 261.
34. Most notably, Garry Wills.
.
516 Notes
35. On Jefferson's admiration for The Wealth of Nations, see Jerry Z. Muller,
Adam Smith in His Time and Ours (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press,
1993), 15.
36. Hume cited in Michael Ignatieff, The Needs of Strangers (New York: Pica-
dor, 2001), 87. In what follows, I draw heavily on Ignatieff s analysis.
37. David Hume, A Treatise of Human Nature (Buffalo, N.Y.: Prometheus Books,
1992), 269 (book 1, section 7).
38. Hume cited in Ignatieff, Needs of Strangers, 89.
39. Hume, "The Sceptic," in Essays Moral, Political, and Literary, ed. Eugene F.
Miller (Indianapolis: Liberty Classics, 1987), 176.
40. Ibid.
41 On Jefferson's reading of Hume and Smith, see Wills, Inventing America, 202.
42. Adam Smith, Theory of Moral Sentiments, eds. D. D. Raphael and A. L. Macfie
(Indianapolis: Liberty Classics, 1982), 181.
43. Ibid., 149. See also the astute analysis of Smith's views on happiness in
Charles L. Griswold, Jr., Adam
Smith and the Virtues of Enlightenment (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1999), esp. 217-227, from which I have drawn.
44. Smith, Theory of Moral Sentiments, 185.
45. Ibid., 183-184.
46. Jefferson, cited in Charles B. Sanford, The Religious Life of Thomas Jefferson
(Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 1984), 36. Franklin, Poor Richard
(1746), in Writings, 1238.
47. Adam Smith, An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations,
2 vols. (Indianapolis: Liberty Classics, 1981), 1:341.
48. Hannah Arendt, "The Pursuit of Happiness," in On Revolution (New York:
Penguin, 1990; 1963), 135.
49. Ibid., 139.
50. This spurious phrase is reproduced on countless websites and online quo-
tation sources.
51. See Jones, Pursuit of Happiness, 29-61. On the subject of happiness in con-
temporary litigation, see Brendan I. Koerner, "What's Your Happiness Worth?"
Legal Affairs, January-February 2004.
52. Cited in Carl L. Becker, The Declaration of Independence: A Study in the History
of Political Ideas (New York: Vintage, 1958), 180-181 (emphasis added).
53. Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America, 2 vols., trans. George Lawrence,
ed. J. P. Mayer (New York: HarperPerennial, 1988), 2:535-536.
54. Ibid., 1:242.
55. Ibid., 1:243.
56. Ibid., 2:536-537.
57. Ibid., 2:530.
58. Ibid., 2:531.
59. Ibid., 2:536.
60. Ibid., 2:531.
61. Ibid., 2:538.
62. Ibid.
63. Ibid., 2:536.
64. Ibid., 2:526-527.
65. Ibid., 2:528-529.
Notes 517
Chapter Seven
1. Thomas Carlyle, Past and Present, ed. Richard D. Altick (New York: New
York University Press, 1965), 157. The following citations from this work are all
drawn from the critical chap. 4 of book 3, "Happv."
2. Ibid., 155.
3. Ibid., 156.
4. Carlyle, Past and Present, "Democracy," 210.
5. Ibid., 149. Carlyle uses the phrase "dismal science" not in Past and Present
but in the "Occasional Discourse on the Negro Question," first published in
Fraziers Magazine in 1849.
6. Ibid., 148.
7. Ibid., 139-140.
8. Engels's review, written in January 1844, was first published in the Deutsch-
Franzosische Jahrbucher in that vear. All citations refer to the translation of the text
Notes 519
31. Charles Fourier, "The Vices of Commerce," in The Utopian Visions of Charles
Fourier, Selected Texts on Work, Love, and Passionate Attraction, trans, and eds. Jonathan
Beecher and Richard Bienvenu (Columbia: University of Missouri Press, 1971),
116-118.
32. Fourier cited in Jonathan Beecher, Charles Fourier: The Visionary and His
World (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1986), 197.
33. John Gray, A Lecture on Human Happiness (London, 1826), 6.
34. George Orwell, "Can Socialists Be Happy?," Tribune, December 20, 1943.
520 Notes
35. Bentham cited in James Steintrager, Bentham (Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell Uni-
versity Press, 1977), 30.
36. Citation from "Quatre opinions sur la religion" (1808) in Le Nouveau chris-
tianisme, 65. Saint-Simon's theory of history is worked out in detail inthe second
volume of L 'Industrie (1817) and in LVrganisateur (1818).
37. Cited in The Utopian Visions of Charles Fourier, 201.
38. Owen, The Book of the New Moral World, Introduction, xxi, and part 7,
chaps. 1, 3.
39. Cited in Harrison, Quest for the New Moral World, 124.
40. See the wonderful account in Carl J. Guarneri, The Utopian Alternative:
Fourierism in Nineteenth-Century America (Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press,
1991), 279-281.
41. Both quotes cited in Christopher H. Johnson, Utopian Communism in France:
tianisme, 50. Saint-Simon made this statement in the context of the breakup of the
Roman Empire, but he frequently noted the similarities between that period and
the present day. See, for example, his comments in the 1808 Introduction aux travaux
scientifiques du XIXe siecle, cited in ibid., 66.
47. These citations are taken from Marx and Engels's Communist Manifesto
(1848). The differences between "scientific socialism" and "utopian socialism"
are elaborated on at length by Engels in Socialism: Utopian and Scientific, first pub-
gion als des illusorischen Gliicks des Volkes ist die Forderung seines wirklkhen
Gliicks."
55. Marx, "Economico-Philosophical Manuscripts of 1844," First Manuscript,
"Alienated Labour," in The Portable Marx, 139.
56. Ibid., 133.
57. Ibid., 136-137.
58. Ibid., 140.
59. Adam Smith, An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations,
2 vols. (Indianapolis: Liberty Classics, 1981), 2:781-782.
60. Ibid., 782.
61. Marx, "Economico-Philosophical Manuscripts of 1844," Third Manuscript,
"Private Property and Communism," in The Portable Marx, 149. On the return or
"leading back" of "man to himself," see also Marx's 1844 essay, "On the Jewish
Question," in which he cites Rousseau directly.
62. Ibid., 150.
63. Cited in Gareth Stedman Jones, "How Marx covered his tracks: The hid-
den link between communism and religion," Times Literary Supplement 51 '5 (June /
Chapter Eight
1. Aristotle, Politics, 1252a and 1280a.
2. These citations are taken from Pico della Mirandola, "Of the Felicity
Which Is Eternal Life," the seventh exposition of his Heptaplus (1489), trans. Douglas
Carmichael, in On the Dignity of Man (Indianapolis: Hackett, 1998), 147-153.
522 Notes
Cannot Make Him Happy," Apology for Raymond Sebond, in The Complete Essays of
Montaigne, trans. Donald M. Frame (Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press,
1965), 330-367.
7. Bentham cited in Roy Porter, Enlightenment: Britain and the Creation of the Mod-
ern World (London: Penguin, 2000), 349.
8. Cited in ibid.
33. Ibid.
34. Ibid., 21:118.
35. Ibid., 21:119-120.
36. Ibid., 21:114.
37. Ibid., 21:124-125.
38. Ibid., 21:125.
39. Charles Darwin, The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection; or, The Pres-
ervation of Favoured Races in the Strugglefor Life, ed. J. W. Burrow (London: Penguin,
1968), 116-119.
40. Ibid., 129.
41. Darwin, Descent of Man, in Works, 21:129-130.
42. Darwin, Autobiography, 88.
43. Ibid., 89.
44. Steven Pinker, How the Mind Works (New York: W. W. Norton, 1997), 391.
For a general overview, see Pinker's section, "The Happiness Treadmill," 389-
393; David M. Buss, "The Evolution of Happiness," The American Psychologist 55,
no. 1 (January 2000): 15-23; and J. H. Barkow, "Happiness in Evolutionary Per-
spective," in N. L. Segal, G. E. Weisfeld, and C. C. Weisfeld, eds. Uniting Psychology
and Biology: Integrative Perspectives on Human Development (Washington, D.C.: Ameri-
can Psychological Association, 1997).
45. Darwin, Autobiography, 89-90.
46. Ibid., 92.
47. Friedrich Nietzsche, Thus Spoke Zarathustra, trans. Walter Kaufmann (New
York: Penguin, 1987), 25.
48. Ibid., 27.
49. Ibid., 14.
50. Cited in Rudiger Safranski, Nietzsche: A Philosophical Biography, trans. Shelley
Frisch (New York: W. W. Norton, 2003), 20.
51. Nietzsche, "Schopenhauer as Educator," Untimely Meditations, trans. R. J.
524 Notes
makes repeatedly in Will to Power. See, in particular, fragments 434 and 704.
91. Freud cited in Peter Gay, Freud: A Life for Our Time (New York: Anchor
Books, 1989), 46 n.
92. Freud cited in Frank J. Sulloway, Freud, Biologist of the Mind: Beyond the Psy-
choanalytic Legend (New York: Basic Books, 1979), 13.
93. Sigmund Freud, Civilization and Its Discontents, trans, and ed. James Strachey,
intro. Peter Gay (New York: W. W. Norton, 1989), 24.
94. Ibid., 25.
95. This is the well-known argument of Philip Rieff's The Triumph of the Thera-
peutic: Uses of Faith After Freud (New York: Harper Row, 1966). &
96. Happiness is the avowed aim of the movement known as "positive
psychology." See Martin R. P. Seligman, Authentic Happiness: Using the New Positive
Notes 525
Psychology to Realize Your Potential for Lasting Fulfillment (New York: Free Press,
2002).
97. Josef Breuer and Sigmund Freud, Studies on Hysteria, trans, and ed. James
Strachey (New York: Basic Books, 2000), 305.
98. On Freud's original title, see Gay, Freud: A Life for Our Time, 544.
99. Freud, Civilization and Its Discontents, 24—25.
100. Ibid., 25.
101. Ibid. Freud explains the pleasure and reality principles most thoroughly
in his 1910 paper, "Formulations on the Two Principles of Mental Functioning."
102. Ibid., 25.
103. Ibid.
104. Ibid., 26.
105. Ibid., 26-27.
106. Ibid., 27-28.
107. Ibid.
108. Ibid., 27-32.
109. Ibid., 29-30, and 30, n. 5.
110. Ibid., 32.
111. Ibid, 33, 56.
112. Nietzsche, Zarathustra, 188. On Freud's comments about happiness to
Fliess, see his letters of January 16, 1898, and May 28, 1899, in The Complete Letters
of Sigmund Freud to Wilhelm Fliess 1881-1904, trans, and ed. Jeffrey Moussaieff
Masson (Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press, 1985), 294, 353.
113. Freud, Civilization and Its Discontents, 32.
114. Ibid., 33.
115. Ibid., 41.
116. Ibid., 34.
117. Ibid., 34-36.
118. Ibid., 37.
119. Ibid., 68-69.
120. Ibid., 97.
121. Ibid, 73.
122. Ibid., 74.
123. Ibid., 34-35.
124. Ibid., 44-45.
125. All citations are taken from the Perennial Classics edition of Aldous
Huxley, Brave New World (New York: HarperPerennial, 1989).
Conclusion
1 Samuel Beckett, Waiting for Godot: A Tragicomedy in Two Acts (New York:
Grove Weidenfeld, 1982), 39. All subsequent citations from the play are taken from
this edition.
2. Cited in Martin ]ay,Adorno (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press,
1984), 19.
3. Herodotus, The History, trans. David Grene (Chicago: University of Chi-
cago Press, 1987), 486 (7.46).
526 Notes
4. Primo Levi, Survival in Auschwitz: The Nazi Assault on Humanity, trans. Stuart
Woolf (New York: Collier Books, 1987), 13.
5. Ibid., 13, 66.
6. Viktor Frankl, Man's Search for Meaning, rev. ed. (New York: Washington
Square Press, 1984), 36, 58-67.
7. David G. Myers, The Pursuit of Happiness: Who Is Happy —
and Why (New York:
William Morrow and Company, 1992), 48. Myers summarizes this literature, as
does Stephen Braun in The Science of Happiness: Unlocking the Mysteries of Mood (New
York: John Wiley, 2000), 27-55.
8. See the literature discussed in Martin E. P. Seligman, Authentic Happiness:
Using the New Positive Psychology to Realize Your Potentialfor Lasting Fulfillment (New
York: Free Press, 2002), 47-48.
9. For a concise summary of this research, pioneered by psychologists and
economists like Daniel Gilbert, Tim Wilson, George Loewenstein, and Daniel
Kahneman, see Jon Gertner, "The Futile Pursuit of Happiness," New York Times
Magazine,September 7, 2003.
10. Samuel Beckett, Happy Days: A Play in Two Acts (New York: Grove Press,
1961), 50. All subsequent citations are taken from this edition.
1 1. All details on the life of Harvey R. Ball are taken from his obituary by Wil-
liam H. Honan, "H. R. Ball, 79, Ad Executive Credited with Smiley Face," New
York Times, April 14,2001.
12. On the fascination with the Mona Lisa, an image that has itself become a
modern icon, see Donald Sassoon's wonderful Becoming Mona Lisa: The Making of a
Global Icon (New York: Harcourt, 2001).
1 3. On the central place of happiness in contemporary advertising, see William
Leiss, Stephen Kline, and Sut Jhally, Social Communication in Advertising: Persons,
Products, and Images of Well- Being (New York: Methuen, 1986).
14. Colin Campbell, The Romantic Ethic and the Spirit ofModern Consumerism (Lon-
don: Basil Blackwell, 1987).
15. Such figures are marshaled concisely for the United States in Stanley
Lebergott, Pursuing Happiness: American Consumers in the Twentieth Century (Princeton,
N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1993).
16. U.S. life expectancy figures taken from the website of the National Center
for Health Statistics at http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/. European figures taken from the
2002 Eurostat report at http://europa.eu.int/comm/eurostat/.
17. For a cogent summary and analysis of the data, see "Happiness: Has So-
cial Science a Clue?," the Lionel Robbins Memorial Lectures delivered at the
19. Ibid.
See Ronald Inglehart, "Globalization and Postmodern Values," in Washington
20.
Quarterly 23 (Winter 2000), 217. A judicious summary of the research on wealth and
well-being is provided by Ed Diener and Shigehiro Oishi, "Money and Happiness:
Income and Subjective Weil-Being Across Nations," in Ed Diener and Eunkook M.
Suh, eds. Culture and Subjective Well-Being (Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 2000), 185-
218.
21. See Ruut Veenhoven, "Freedom and Happiness: A Comparative Study in
Forty-four Nations in the Early 1990s," in Diener and Suh, eds. Culture and Subjec-
tive Weil-Being, 257.
See Michael Argyle, The Psychology of Happiness, 2nd ed. (London: Routledge,
22.
1987), 71-89 and 165-178.
23. Ronald Inglehart and Hans-Dieter Klingemann, "Genes, Culture, Democracy,
and Happiness," in Diener and Suh, eds. Culture and Subjective Weil-Being, 171-175.
24. Argyle, The Psychology of Happiness, 89-110.
and Diener and Oishi, "Money and Happiness: Income and Sub-
25. Ibid., 186,
jective Weil-Being Across Nations," in Diener and Suh, eds. Culture and Subjective
Well-Being, 205-207.
26. Bruno S. Frey and Alois Stutzer, Happiness and Economics: How the Economy
and Institutions Affect Human Weil-Being (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press,
2001).
27. The book in question is Robert E. Lane, The Loss of Happiness in Market De-
mocracies (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 2000).
28. John Stuart Mill, Utilitarianism, ed. Roger Crisp (New York: Oxford Univer-
sity Press, 1998), 62-63.
29. All these genuine titles can be retrieved via a simple search onAmazon.com.
30. A particularly insightful, if bleak, analysis of this situation in the context of
Western Europe is provided in the novels of the French writer Michel Houel-
lebecq. Significantly, one of Houellebecq's early collections of poetry is entitled
La poursuite dubonheur, "the pursuit of happiness." He treats the theme recurrently
in his fiction as well.
31. Aristotle, Nichomachean Ethics, trans. Terence Irwin (Indianapolis: Hackett,
1985), 13.23.
32. Andre Comte-Sponville, Le Bonheur, desesperement (Paris: Editions Pleins
Feux, 2000), 10.
33. Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America, 2 vols., trans. George Lawrence,
ed. J. Mayer (New York: HarperPerennial, 1988), 2:547-548.
P.
34. D. T. Lykken and A. Tellegen, "Happiness Is a Stochastic Phenomenon,"
Psychological Science 7, no! 3 (May 1996): 186-1 89.
35. Ibid., 188.
36. The original claim and the retraction are discussed in David Lykken, Hap-
piness: The Nature and Nurture of Joy and Contentment (New York: St. Martin's, 1999),
3-4. The work includes a detailed account of the research on the heritability of
happiness.
37. Ibid., 58.
38. Braun, The Science of Happiness, 51.
39. Lykken, Happiness: The Nature and Nurture, 60.
528 Notes
Enlightenment, xiv, 208-12, 215, eudaimonia, 3-4, 11, 31, 33, 45, 49,
217,227,230-33,237,245-52, 64, 68, 77, 404. See also makarios
263, 274, 280-83, 285-86, 288, Euripides, 27-28
311,314,330,363,372,381- evil, 250, 283. See also good and evil;
82, 385, 398, 402, 405, 430, sin
471 evolution. See Darwin
and attainability of happiness, 13, Exodus, 78-79, 177
209
centrality of, 13-14, 408 faith, 167-68, 264, 267, 435. See also
characterizations of, 208, 209, 212 future reward happiness
and pleasure, 209-10 Fall, the, 102-3, 130, 138, 244, 247, 303
pursuit of, 14,209,244 fatalistic worldview, 19, 110
utility principle, 212. See also fate, 7-11, 19,25, 105. See also
utility, principle of predestination
Scottish, 325, 327 felicific calculus, 213, 219, 230, 470.
Enlightenment thinkers, 13, 208- See also utilitarianism
10,212,221,230,231,245-252 felicitas, 67, 68, 74, 80, 95, 138
entitlement, sense of, 14 Felicitas, 75, 95
Epicurus, 50, 56-59, 65, 224 Felicitas, cult of, 69, 74, 104
life history and overview, 52-53 felicitas naturalis ("natural felicity"),
Locke and, 181 148, 163
Marx on, 391 Felicitas Publica ("Public
on pleasure and pain, 52, 54, 55- Prosperity"), 69, 70, 153, 154.
58, 65, 181, 209-10 See also "public felicity"
on reason, truth, and happiness, Felicitas Temporum ("The Felicity
229
56, of the Times"), 69
equality, 332-33, 336-37, 361, 430. felix, 11, 67
See also Declaration of Ferguson, Will, 472
Independence festivals. See also celebrations and
Erasmus, Desiderius, 163 festivities
Eriugena (John the Scot), 107-9, of happiness, 262, 266
111, 116, 118-20 Ficino, Marsilio, 151, 160, 173
Eros, 31-35, 40 Finch, John, 383-84
Common, 32 Fitzgerald, Edward, 357
Heavenly, 32-33 forgiveness, as pure happiness, 166
Plato and, 31-35, 68, 112 fortune, 3, 10-11, 47, 105, 136, 151,
eroticism. See sexuality 155, 257, 259. See also chance;
Eryximachus, 59 fate; luck
eternal paradise, 80-81, 138, 139 fortune's wheel, 11, 136-37, 155
ethical achievement. See also moral Fourier, Charles, 377-80, 383-85, 387
sense and moral agency; Francis, Saint, 121,406-7
virtue(s) Frankl, Viktor E., 458
happiness of, 132 Franklin, Benjamin, 312-13, 331-
eucharist, 114 32, 356, 357
534 Index
Frederick the Great, 227-28, 450 God, 204. See also heaven, and earth;
free will, 9, 110, 111. See also volition Lord; mystical return; specific
freedom, 13, 14, 144-46, 164, 182, belief in, 227, 365, 366, 450
186, 208. See also Brave New freedom to raise oneself to, 167—
World; democracy 69
Christian, 167-69 as happiness, 116-17
to raise oneself to God, 167-69 happiness as living the way
Freedom, final, 370-72, 398. See also intended by, 204
emancipation; Utopian true happiness as the gift of, 104-5
socialism and socialists gods, 3-4, 7-9, 12-15, 25. See also
"freedom from suffering," 458 Eros; Felicitas, cult of; Lord
French Revolution, 253, 254, 258, Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von, 275
264—266. See also Lequinio Gogh, Vincent van, 428
Frenzeny, Paul, 355 good and evil, 183, 184, 250, 251,
Friedrich, Caspar David, 279 283. See also virtue(s)
Freud, Sigmund, xii, xiii, xiv, 35, good life, 43-45. See also virtue (s)
301,419,437,440-51,466- government, 20-21, 188. See also
67 democracy; Locke; specific topics
strange, 331-43
Madison, James, 318 Melanchthon, Philip, 173
Maffei, Celso, 163 Mettrie, Julien Offray de la, 223-33,
makarios (blessed), 3, 68, 77, 80, 82, 325, 408-9
85. See also eudaimonia Enlightened outcry against, 222-23
Malthus, T.R., 452 and Epicurus, 228-229
Maimonides, 126 on pleasure, 228
Mammonism, 364, 365 writings
Manetti, Gianozzo, 152 Anti- Seneca, or Discourse on
Mark, Gospel according to Saint, 86 Happiness, 228
marriage, 171 L Histoire naturelle de fame, 224
martyrs and martyrdom, 95, 96. See UHomme machine {Man Machine),
also Jesus Christ 225-27
Index 539
pleasure, 47, 54-56, 66, 68, 161-63, Protestant sects, 1 76. See also
194,209-10,219,228,229,232, Calvinism; Luther;
358. See also joy; specific topics Reformation
vs. happiness, 25, 55, 235-37, prudence, 56, 155, 229
245, 257, 263-65, 364 Prud'hon, Pierre-Paul, 277
happiness equated with, 232 Psalms, 77-78
pain and, 301-2 Pseudo-Dionysus, 112, 115, 118,
as source of motivation, 181-82 120, 162
"pleasure gardens," 199, 202 psychologists and happiness, 477.
pleasure principle, 443, 451. See also See also Freud
happiness, pursuit of psychology, laws of, 179, 180
Plotinus, 100 "public felicity," 214-15. See also
Plutarch, 68, 407-8 Felicitas Publica
Pochet, A. 203, 262
P., Purcell, Henry, 192
Poe, Edgar Allen, 399 purification, 304
"political happiness," 186 "pursuit of happiness." See
politics, 20-21. See also specific topics happiness
Politics (Aristotle), 48-49
"politics of happiness," 471 Quincey, Thomas de, 293
polygethes, 26
Pombal, Marquis of, 211 Raleigh, Walter, 198
Pompeii, 66 Ranters, 176
Pontius Pilate, 433 Raphael, 40-42, 50, 51, 149
"poor man's son," case of, 329 Rasselas, Prince of Abissinia, 246-
Pope, Alexander, 200, 363 47,250
Porphyry, 100 Rauschenberg, Robert, 474
possession by alien force, 15 reality principle, 443
predestination, 105, 110-11, 172. reason, 44, 45, 49, 56, 229-30
See also fate Kant on, 250-52
prejudice, as only real barrier to Redon, Odilon, 367
pleasure, 232 Reformation, 137, 169-70, 173. See
President's Council on Bioethics, also Calvin; Luther
478 Renaissance, 142-164, 193
pride, 14, 288, 450. See also egotism "Renaissance spirit," 148
Priestley, Joseph, 249 renunciation, 90, 446. See also
primary process, 443 asceticism
Prodicus, 59, 60 of desire, 58, 303-4
promised land, 78-81, 83, 93, 322. research on happiness, 467-70, 475-
See also apocalyptic predictions 76
America as, 331 Restoration literature, 190-96
property, acquisition and ownership Revelation, Book of, 86
317-20
of, Richter, Jean-Paul, 275, 280
Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of rights, 217
Capitalism, The (Weber), 355-59 Ripa, Cesare, 153, 154
542 Index
suffering, 52, 103, 205-6, 281-83, New vs. Old World, 333-36
304. See also melancholy; pain; on pleasure, 336-38, 341
unhappiness; specific topics on self-interest, 338
avoidance of, 83 "strange melancholy," 337
being happy in spite of, 94 toleration, 187, 208-9
Christianity and, 76-77, 83, 138, "tragedy of happiness," 422, 444,
172-75,281 455, 460
Darwin on, 421-22. See also tragedy (\cs) /tragoidia, 7-10, 14-15,
Darwin 20,26-28,426-27. See also
freedom from, 458 Beckett; Greek literature;
Freud on, 444-45, 448-49 natural disasters; Shakespeare
544 Index
HAPPINESS
A debonair account of Western philosophical speculation
At^^ '
through the prism of its classical starting point: What constitutes
^ >
^^ I the well-lived life and how are we to find it? Happiness is a
New York University; and Erich Maria Remarque Professor of European Studies, NYU
"From the famous encounter between Solon and Croesus to Freud's dark
reflections on the fate of those whose lives are driven from the deeper reaches,
— DANIEL N. ROBINSON,
Distinguished Professor, Emeritus, Georgetown University,
and member of the philosophy faculty, Oxford
'In this eminently readable work, McMahon looks back through two thousand years of
thought, searching for evidence of how our contemporary obsession [with happiness]
came to be. From the tragic plays of ancient Greece to the inflammatory rhetoric of
deeply into the rich trove of texts that elucidate and confirm the development of
Western notions of this elusive ideal. Throughout McMahon leads the reader with
strong, clear thinking, laying out his ideas with grace, both challenging and entertaining
us in equal measure." —PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
ISBN 0-fl?113-flflb-7
52750
9 780871»138866