What is the Good Life?
A deeper exploration of the claim of a good life, what is a good life, how might one attain such a feat?
Does the acorn that becomes an oak tree live the good life? Does merely fulfilling one’s own nature qualify as the good life? Is the good life built on logic? Does the good life use recurring pleasure to balance out recurring pain? In this paper, I will examine what the good life means to mankind. Primarily, I will be comparing the life led by the Stoic with the pursuit of the good life as presented by an Epicurean lifestyle. I will show how these two concepts of the good life differ and will then provide my own view of what it takes to have the good life.
Stoicism is a philosophy that is fundamentally very simple. It can be broken down to a basic logical argument form. The pursuit of truth is virtuous and passion is what clouds the truth, one can conclude that passion is the cause of being without virtue. The implied premise is that “One ought to live a virtuous life.” This is quite a loaded statement. To begin unpacking this basic argument, I will start by defining the concepts. Passion is used in this context as pleasure or pain, where as one is polar opposite from the other. Such as the ditch that runs along each side a road. To abstain from either ditch is to keep sure-footing on the road. Virtue is a vague term but for the sake of this paper a virtuous life is the same as the good life. Stoic ethics teach that liberation from passion is attainable through reason. In addition, Stoics would argue that the good life is one free from the troubles that are tied to making brash and emotionally driven decisions. Stoics understand that a decision made in anger is one that will cause the most regret and they further contend that a life filled with regret is not the good life. So because a life with many regrets is not the Stoic good life, the good life sought by a Stoic would be one that strives to put an end to regret. Reason and logic are the primary methods that a Stoic uses to make good life decisions. The goal of the Stoic life is to achieve clear and reasonable judgment. By using reason, logic and self-reflection, one can more easily maintain very clear judgment throughout a lifetime.
In a sense, the Stoic good life would appear to others as a life divided. The Stoic elects to compartmentalize each aspect of his life into its own realm. This dramatically simplifies life allowing the Stoic to easily accomplish his objective through a mastery of reason and logic. As an example, one’s career choice would be the obvious conclusion of a standard argument form with each premise being input from the Stoic’s life. If I enjoy gardening and I am a good gardener then I ought to be a professional gardener. A Stoic will find happiness and contentment in this choice because he uses logic to make a well-defined life decision. His judgment is not clouded by irrational thoughts or passions.
Liked it

