Thoughts on Philebus
There
are questions that haunt you and keep you up at night or at least they should.
At any rate they do that for me. The question confronted in Plato’s dialogue
Philebus is one of those questions. What is the good life? How should we
live? I’m reminded of the 2006 Russian film Ostrov (The Island). The
answer given there by the holy fool for Christ is, “Live however you can, just
try not to sin too much.” This answer seems to be grounded in the Blessed
Augustine’s words, “Love, and do what you will” found in his 7th
homily on 1 Jn 4:4-12. Pretty good advice coming from a real source of
authority. But should we unpack this more? How exactly can we be sure we are
being truly loving and not just under the illusions of prelest and
self-centeredness? We humans are awfully good at rationalizing our evil and
deceiving ourselves. Plato, in this dialogue offers us a more concrete yet not
overly deterministic path on how to make sure we assimilate ourselves to God as
he urges us in Theaetetus. Even if not the most interesting, this is probably
the most important and urgent question in philosophy. I, in fact, think it is
THE question that is the reason why philosophy exists. Those who are
passionately seeking the truth are doing so, in part, for the beauty of
knowledge alone but I also believe a significant motivation is this urge to
want to live the best life possible. Let us see what Plato thinks that looks
like.
Right
off the bat it seems like we are dealing with a mutually exclusive dichotomy –
either the best life is one of pure hedonistic, blissful pleasure devoid of
anything remotely similar to rationality or it is one of the most
disinterested, apathetic flexing of the intellect. Right away Socrates hints
that these two options may not be exhaustive. He never really gives an argument
that I saw for why a life of pure equanimous apatheia pursuing intellectual
knowledge is not the absolute best—just says it obviously couldn’t be. I agree
with that, but I was a little disappointed that there wasn’t a rigorous
argument for that. He does give a few arguments as to why unadulterated
pleasure is not the best type of life. Firstly, it appears that pleasures
differ so widely that some even seem to be polar opposites to one another. Do
we really think the pleasure a meth addict feels when getting high or the
murderer gets during a kill is the exact same as that of the person who feels
good from giving money or aid to the poor and disenfranchised? The good can
never be opposite itself, so if pleasure can be opposite itself then it can’t
be the good. This is not the case for intellect, since no object of the
intellect is opposed to intellect, but it still isn’t the highest good.
Secondly, Socrates brings up another aspect of the good. Not only can it never
be opposite itself, but it can also never need anything to complete itself. It
is “the most perfect of all things” (20d). When something is good, it is just
good, it doesn’t need something else besides goodness to make it good. Therefore,
a life of unalloyed pleasure with absolutely no semblance of intellect, reason,
memory, knowledge, or judgment should be juxtaposed against a life of pure
intellect with no pleasure or pain. A life of total pleasure sans intellect
doesn’t fare well. How exactly would you know you were even enjoying pleasure
without reason? How would you remember it without memory? It would be chaotic
hedonism. There seems to be nothing wrong with a life of pure intelligence, in
fact Socrates later says it of all lives is the most godlike (33b).
Socrates
hints at the answer to what is greater than both of these early on and fully
unpacks it later. What’s better than either a life of pleasure or wisdom? A god
revealed it to Socrates in a half-remembered dream that it is a mixture of both
(22a)! I was actually pleasantly surprised at this, as I’ve always heard how
pagan Platonists and monks hate the body and are world-deniers, etc. Plato
evidently was more well-rounded than many believe. In fact, Socrates severely
criticizes those who hold a grim and dour view of life, hating all pleasure
(44c-d). After this introduction to the problem and a foretaste of the answer,
Plato decides to saddle us with some pretty heavy metaphysics. He plunges right
into the problem of the One and the Many and relates it masterfully to his
dialectical method of analysis. There is a trivial sense in which all things
consist of a one and a many, which isn’t really a big deal, or so Socrates
says. This is seen in the fact that I am one person but have many different
parts like bones, cells, molecules, senses, mental states, etc. There is the
much more difficult sense involving eternal Forms – do these exist as separate
monads? How is it possible for something which isn’t subject to decay or
generation to come to be in an infinite multitude of things? How can a unity at
the same time be a plurality (15c)? Plato offers no answer here, he just
accurately states the problem. Perhaps he deals with it later.
At
any rate, since every created thing consists of a one and a many they must
also, by their very nature, have a conjunction of Limit and Limitlessness. The
shrewd dialectician embarks on a two-step process in order to understand and
become an expert in something. First, the unity or common essence must be found
behind the many seemingly disparate parts. Once that is done the unity needs to
be broken down into however many constituent parts it has. Each of these parts
is also a one and a many and so we keep repeating this loop of finding the
common essence in the thing which makes all its properties similar and then
breaking it down into smaller parts until we have gotten to rock bottom. What
we will notice then is that the one we started with is not only one and a seemingly
infinite many – but that there is an exact number of intermediaries. Being an
expert in something lies precisely in this exact knowledge of how many
intermediaries there are between the one and the many and what their nature is.
This makes the difference between a charlatan and a philosopher and thus makes
all the difference in the world. This is all pretty abstract, so Plato wisely
insists that examples can help us here. Let us consider the budding musician. A
song is “one” in the fact that it is one song and not two or three etc. It is
also a “many” since it has tons of parts within itself such as notes, rests,
harmony, rhythm, melody, pitch and many of these change many times over in even
the simplest songs. If all you know about music is that songs make many
different sounds you don’t know much – this shows you know that it is one and
many, that it is limited to one song and unlimited to a great multitude of
parts. If you are more knowledgeable you will be able to identify and
understand the nature of the different pitches involved, the notes, etc. An
expert is someone who not only recognizes the limited one and the unlimited
many but knows exactly how many and of what nature are all the intermediaries
in between the one and the many. In our example that would mean they would know
exactly how many notes, types of rhythm, melody, pitch, etc. are possible in
any possible song , understands their nature like the back of their hand, and
can effortlessly identify them in any song and be able to explain them.
The
main way people get off track from becoming experts in any art is due to
laziness as expressed in impatience and procrastination. We don’t bother to sit
down and do the work to understand and learn all these intermediaries and
figure out exactly how many they are – we just rush unthinkingly towards the
goal when we aren’t ready. Protarchus, the main interlocutor in this dialogue,
demands to know how all this is relevant. It seems Plato was cognizant of the
fact that the preceding was a heavy burden, but ultimately worth it. This is
relevant so that Socrates can dissect different views of ethics and we will be
able to follow along, understanding his method of analysis, so it is critical
to understand it. He begins by dividing all things into 5 classes: the Limited,
the Unlimited, the mixture of both, the cause of this mixing, and the cause of
the separation. Words indicative of the Unlimited are vague and indefinite like
more, less, hotter, colder, slightly, strongly, very, a lot, quicker, etc.
Words that imply definite quantity belong to the Limited—like equal, double,
triple, 45.367 (exact numbers), etc. Being a modern man I would’ve assumed
Limit is worse than the Unlimited since we don’t like being limited – but Plato
describes it as being superior since it puts an end to conflict and brings
harmony and balance to all things (25e). Whereas most modern Americans believe
that unlimited pleasure is the way to live – Plato correctly sees that it leads
to lawlessness and wickedness – limit is needed to preserve peace. Any person
who works diligently to perfect some art, whether it be an athlete, musician,
scholar, writer, scientist, farmer, hunter, etc. knows that the key to doing
well is denying yourself short-term pleasures in order to see longer term
gains. Limit is more valuable to a good life than Limitlessness.
The
Unlimited cannot be the unalloyed good since it contains opposites like pain
and pleasure. Next, we learn that the cause of the mixing of Limit and
Unlimited is none other than reason. “For all the wise agree, thereby
glorifying themselves in earnest, that in reason we have the king of heaven and
earth” (28c). It was obvious to the ancients (and to any sane person) that the
universe isn’t governed by blind, irrational chance but by a careful
intelligence. He then examines pleasure, pain, and desire in greater depth.
Pain seems to be when our natural state is disturbed, and pleasure is when that
natural state is restored. Being extremely hot is unnatural and thus painful
and cooling off to our normal body temperature is pleasurable. Desire occurs
when we are in an unnatural state and yearn to be back into our normal state. Thus,
desire must entirely belong to the soul and not the body since, by definition,
you desire the opposite of what your body is currently experiencing. The body
feels hot and the soul desires for the body to be cool. The pleasures and pains
of the soul are more far-reaching than those of the body as anyone who has felt
depression or excitement at a pivotal life event knows. If we didn’t know
better, we’d think that people in good bodily health would experience greater
pleasure than sick people, but due to the aforementioned, this is exactly
backwards. The desire of a sick person to be healed is greater than a healthy
person and this desire belongs to the soul and things of the soul carry more
weight than things of the body. Similarly, more extreme pleasure is found in a
wanton existence than in a moderate and measured one. “The temperate man,
surely, is regularly restrained by the proverbial warning, ‘Never too much,’
and heeds it, whereas the senseless profligate is mastered by his extreme
pleasure, which ultimately drives him insane and makes him the talk of the
town” (45e). The conclusion that we are reaching is that the most intense
pleasures (and pains) occur when the soul and body are in a BAD and not
a good condition. Therefore, intense pleasure and pain should be avoided.
We
then come to Socrates’ idea that we can classify pleasures as true or false,
just like an opinion can be true or false. Protarchus is a bit dumbfounded at
this assertion, as most readers will be. Surely pleasure can be bad, but how
can it be false? Socrates defines a true pleasure as one that gives enjoyment
from a well of absolute and innate beauty untainted by any pain – pure. Purity
is based on quality, not quantity. A million gallons of water where 50% is
tainted with arsenic may in the end have 500,000 gallons of water untainted,
but it will never be as pure as a single gallon of 99% water. True pleasures
are also always characterized by moderation whereas impure and false pleasures
are privy to extremes. We also see that
pleasure is something that comes to be rather than something that just is. If
you put all your hope in pleasure you are placing your hope in something that
is inherently unstable – it cycles incessantly through the processes of decay
and generation and as such we can never find enduring satisfaction in it. It is
a means to an end and that end is the Good. Being is always superior to
becoming, just as shipbuilding exists for the sake of the ships and not the
other way around. Every religious sage throughout the ages has come to this
most important of affirmations – that satisfaction is never to be found in
contingent changing things, but in things that eternally and absolutely ARE. A
final reason why pleasure can’t be the good is that we would have to accept the
absurd and ugly conclusion that a man who dies for the love of another is not
as good as a selfish hedonist who never helps anyone since the man who dies
isn’t having fun and the hedonist is.
After
spending all this time on examining pleasure, Socrates then turns his gaze
towards knowledge. Here he finds that precise and accurate measurements are the
key to knowledge as any carpenter knows. As such, Plato holds those arts in
higher regard that require greater precision. For him, the one that requires
the most precision and is thus the purest and best art is that of dialectic. “The
cognition of that which is, that which exists in reality ever unchanged, is
held, I cannot doubt, by all people who have the smallest endowment of reason
to be far and away truer than any other” (58a). As we see, the difference
between dialectic and other arts is that it is dedicated to studying the
eternal, absolute, and unchanging. Gorgias was definitely wrong when he thought
that persuasion was the greatest of arts – Plato agrees it is useful, but it
doesn’t always express truth and is not always precise. Even science, though
admirable, studies things that constantly change and it is impossible to speak
as precisely of things that change as you can of things that never change. You
cannot get a permanent grasp on impermanent things. “We find fixity, purity,
truth, and what we have called perfect clarity, either in those things that are
always, unchanged, unaltered, and free of all admixture, or in what is most
akin to them; everything else must be called inferior and of secondary
importance” (59c). Reason and intellect are closer to the eternal truth than
pleasure, though they aren’t quite as unchanging. At any rate, they command far
more respect than pleasure does.
Plato
reiterates that the Good needs absolutely nothing else besides itself to make
it good and that our ultimate good is found in a thoroughly mixed life (61b).
What exactly is the best mixture? As mentioned, before we should focus on
quality and not quantity, so it doesn’t matter how much pleasure or intellect
is in the good life but how pure that pleasure or intellect is. Socrates sees
no harm in allowing the less pure forms of knowledge that deal with things that
come to be (like science and music) into the mixed good life alongside the pure
pleasure of learning and dialectic. At the very worst these lesser forms of
knowledge are harmless and at best they can be useful and a source of pleasure,
a pastime we needn’t repent of as Plato remarks in Timaeus. What about
pleasures? According to the preceding discussion we should probably tread more
softly here. We should only allow the pure, true pleasures and completely avoid
the false, impure pleasures. How can we tell apart false and true pleasures?
False pleasures hurt our health, virtue, and temperance. Extremely intense
pleasures should be avoided at all costs – they disturb our peace and destroy
reason in us, even if temporarily and reason is the king of heaven and earth as
we learned earlier; we shouldn’t destroy it. True pleasures to be pursued are
those that aid us in good health, being more moderate, and becoming more
virtuous. Another idea that should guide us in our path is that the incorporeal
should always govern the corporeal – we should always choose what is good for
our soul over what is good for our body. The three main ingredients in this
mixture are truth, proportion, and beauty. Intellect is closer to truth than
pleasure is. Intellect is closer to proportion also. Intellect is never ugly
and so is actually closer to beauty than pleasure is as well. Also, when people
are experiencing extreme pleasures, they can look either ridiculous or ugly and
if we catch them in such a state, we are ashamed at their behavior. This never
happens if we catch someone deep in thought – so intellect is more akin to
beauty than pleasure.
All
this goes to show that reason should have a greater part in the mixture of our
lives than pleasure, even though true pleasures can and should be present as
well – by far the greater part should be constituted of activities that engage
the mind. However, Plato does say that the most important element in the entire
mixture is proportion – it is what makes things beautiful and excellent, after
all. Socrates identifies the hierarchy of elements in the mixed life. Most
important is proportion. Next, is beauty followed by reason. The fourth most
important ingredient is knowledge of changing things, the arts, etc. and the
least important element is found in true pleasures. So, we see that reason is
far more valuable to a human life than pleasure ever will be. This is exactly
backwards from how our current society seems to be operating and we will pay
the price for that. We are very short-sighted and focus the most on base,
earthly, physical extreme pleasures that only last a short while. We are
swimming in a roiling sea of pornography, drugs, crappy fast food, get rich
quick schemes, casual sexual relationships, social media platforms, fads and
trends that change faster than Oklahoma weather patterns, and other things
designed to give us quick dopamine spikes. All of these things thwart peace
because they don’t promote stability. They also inflame our passions and teach
us to try to find the good life in the most fleeting and lowest of things
rather than helping us to attain to the heights of heaven.
In conclusion, it seems like the best life is one that is a mix of wisdom and pleasure where the overwhelming majority of our life should be focused on gaining wisdom and far less on seeking pleasure and even then those pleasures should mainly come from the delights of the intellect. We should completely shut immoderate, extremely intense and sudden pleasures that damage health and virtue out of our lives. We should only include true pleasures that are free of all pain and promote bodily and psychological health, moderation, and increase our virtue although these should take the backseat to learning and growing in love and wisdom. We should prioritize the contemplation of eternal realities that never change because they alone are capable of satisfying us and giving us lasting peace and joy. I think this is an excellent view of ethics and if our society followed its suggestions, we would be much better off. Plato also manages to deftly avoid being either too narrow or too wide – he doesn’t tell us exactly how much of our life needs to be dedicated to either pleasure or wisdom – he just offers basic guidelines that are grounded in Truth. We are still left with innumerable questions. What exactly is moderation? Evagrius also taught moderation but died from malnutrition at 50 because he only ate a tiny amount of bread and raw vegetables a day. St. Isaac the Syrian too preached moderation and he went blind from reading too much. What exactly are the good and bad pleasures? Isn’t moderation relative and therefore belongs to the Unlimited which is inferior to the Limited? He also doesn’t bring up other things I would think are important to the good life such as worshipping God, giving to the poor, caring for others, etc. But we must understand that it was a short 60-page dialogue that dealt specifically with the topic of wisdom vs. pleasure as they relate to the good life. It was never meant to be exhaustive of the topic. It is up to each one of us to find and pursue that perfect balance with the help and wisdom of those who know more than us and by praying to God for help, as Socrates always does. I believe following this outline can help us love more and sin less as the sources in the introduction urged us. If they do, then this dialogue was not written in vain.
Loved it ❤
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