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hedonism
he·don·ism H0122500 (hēd′n-ĭz′əm)n.1. Pursuit of or devotion to pleasure, especially to the pleasures of the senses.2. Philosophy The ethical doctrine holding that only what is pleasant or has pleasant consequences is intrinsically good.3. Psychology The doctrine holding that behavior is motivated by the desire for pleasure and the avoidance of pain. [Greek hēdonē, pleasure; see swād- in Indo-European roots + -ism.] he′don·ist n.he′don·is′tic adj.he′don·is′ti·cal·ly adv.hedonism (ˈhiːdəˌnɪzəm; ˈhɛd-) n1. (Philosophy) ethics a. the doctrine that moral value can be defined in terms of pleasure. See utilitarianismb. the doctrine that the pursuit of pleasure is the highest good2. the pursuit of pleasure as a matter of principle3. indulgence in sensual pleasures[C19: from Greek hēdonē pleasure] heˈdonic, ˌhedoˈnistic adj ˈhedonist nhe•don•ism (ˈhid nˌɪz əm) n. 1. the doctrine that pleasure or happiness is the highest good. 2. devotion to pleasure and self-gratification as a way of life. [1855–60; < Greek hēdon(ḗ) pleasure + -ism] he′don•ist, n., adj. he`don•is′tic, adj. he`don•is′ti•cal•ly, adv. hedonism1. Ethics. the doctrine that pleasure or happiness is the highest good. See also epicurism. 2. a devotion to pleasure as a way of life. — hedonist, n. — hedonistic, adj.See also: PleasurehedonismThe belief that pleasure and the avoidance of pain constitute the highest good.ThesaurusNoun | 1. | hedonism - the pursuit of pleasure as a matter of ethical principleethical motive, ethics, morals, morality - motivation based on ideas of right and wrong | | 2. | hedonism - an ethical system that evaluates the pursuit of pleasure as the highest goodmoral philosophy, ethics - the philosophical study of moral values and rules |
hedonismnoun pleasure-seeking, gratification, sensuality, self-indulgence, dolce vita, pursuit of pleasure, luxuriousness, sensualism, sybaritism, epicureanism, epicurism the reckless hedonism that life in Las Vegas demandsTranslationsHedonismushedonismohédonismeedonismohedonism
hedonism (hē`dənĭz'əm) [Gr.,=pleasure], the doctrine that holds that pleasure is the highest good. Ancient hedonism expressed itself in two ways: the cruder form was that proposed by AristippusAristippus , c.435–c.360 B.C., Greek philosopher of Cyrene, first of the Cyrenaics. He held pleasure to be the highest good and virtue to be identical with the ability to enjoy. ..... Click the link for more information. and the early CyrenaicsCyrenaics , one of the minor schools of Greek philosophy, flourishing in the late 4th and early 3d cent. B.C. Cyrenaic philosophy taught that present individual pleasure is the highest good. ..... Click the link for more information. , who believed that pleasure was achieved by the complete gratification of all one's sensual desires; on the other hand, EpicurusEpicurus , 341–270 B.C., Greek philosopher, b. Samos; son of an Athenian colonist. He claimed to be self-taught, although tradition states that he was schooled in the systems of Plato and Democritus by his father and various philosophers. ..... Click the link for more information. and his school, though accepting the primacy of pleasure, tended to equate it with the absence of pain and taught that it could best be attained through the rational control of one's desires. Ancient hedonism was egoistic; modern British hedonism, expressed first in 19th-century utilitarianismutilitarianism , in ethics, the theory that the rightness or wrongness of an action is determined by its usefulness in bringing about the most happiness of all those affected by it. ..... Click the link for more information. , is universalistic in that it is conceived in a social sense—"the greatest happiness for the greatest number." Bibliography See J. C. Gosling, Pleasure and Desire (1969). Hedonism an ethical position that asserts that pleasure is the highest good and the criterion for human behavior and that reduces moral demands in all their diversity to pleasure. Hedonism views the striving for pleasure as man’s basic motivating principle, inherent and predetermining all his actions; this makes hedonism a variant of anthropological naturalism. As a normative principle hedonism is the opposite of asceticism. In ancient Greece one of the first exponents of ethical hedonism was the founder of the Cyrenaic school, Aristippus (early fourth century B.C.), who regarded as the highest good the attainment of sensory satisfaction. The ideas of hedonism were developed differently by Epicurus and his followers. Here they approached the principles of eudaemonism, insofar as the criterion for satisfaction was considered to be the absence of suffering and tranquillity of the spirit (ataraxia). Hedonist ideas were widely disseminated during the Renaissance and, later, in the ethical theories of the philosophes. In the struggle against the religious conception of morality T. Hobbes, J. Locke, P. Gassendi, and the French materialists of the 18th century frequently had recourse to the hedonist interpretation of ethics. The principles of hedonism achieved their fullest expression in the ethical theories of utilitarianism, which conceived of utility as pleasure or the absence of suffering (J. Bentham, J. S. Mill). Some modern bourgeois theoreticians also subscribe to ideas of hedonism, including G. Santayana (USA), M. Schlick (Austria), and D. Drake (USA). Marxism criticizes hedonism primarily for its naturalistic and ahistorical conception of man. It sees in hedonism an extremely simplified interpretation of the driving forces and motivations of human behavior, an interpretation that tends toward relativism and individualism. REFERENCESMarx, K., and F. Engels. Soch, 2nd ed. vol. 3, pp. 418-20. “Pis’ma i fragmenty Epikura.” In the collection: Materialisty drevnei Gretsii. Moscow, 1955. Gomperz, G. Zhizneponimanie grecheskikh filosofov i ideal vnutrennei svobody. St. Petersburg, 1912. (Translated from German.) Helvétius, C. A. O cheloveke, ego umstvennykh sposobnostiakh i ego vospitanii. Moscow, 1938. Holbach, P. H. “Sistema prirody ili o zakonakh mira fizicheskogo i mira dukhovnogo.” Izbr. proiz., vol. 1. Moscow, 1963. (Translated from French.)T. A. KUZ’MINA hedonism[′hēd·ən‚iz·əm] (psychology) The doctrine that every act is motivated by the desire for pleasure or the aversion from pain and unpleasantness. hedonism Ethicsa. the doctrine that moral value can be defined in terms of pleasure b. the doctrine that the pursuit of pleasure is the highest good hedonism
hedonism [he´don-izm] 1. pleasure-seeking behavior.2. the ethical doctrine that regards pleasure and happiness as the highest good.3. in psychology, the theory that the attainment of pleasure and the avoidance of pain are the prime motivators of human behavior. adj. adj hedon´ic.hedonism (hēd′n-ĭz′əm)n.1. Pursuit of or devotion to pleasure, especially to the pleasures of the senses.2. Psychology The doctrine holding that behavior is motivated by the desire for pleasure and the avoidance of pain. he′don·ist n.he′don·is′tic adj.he′don·is′ti·cal·ly adv.hedonism Pleasure-seeking behavior. Cf Anhedonia. hedonism The philosophic and psychological proposition that pleasure, or gratification, is the only ultimate good, and that the pursuit of pleasure is the ultimate motivating force. The concept of ‘pleasure’ is, of course, susceptible to a variety of definitions.hedonism
Synonyms for hedonismnoun pleasure-seekingSynonyms- pleasure-seeking
- gratification
- sensuality
- self-indulgence
- dolce vita
- pursuit of pleasure
- luxuriousness
- sensualism
- sybaritism
- epicureanism
- epicurism
Words related to hedonismnoun the pursuit of pleasure as a matter of ethical principleRelated Words- ethical motive
- ethics
- morals
- morality
noun an ethical system that evaluates the pursuit of pleasure as the highest goodRelated Words |