The Philosophy Garden: Stoicism and Beyond
Practical Wisdom
Aristotle on pain, pleasure, virtue, and vice
0:00
Current time: 0:00 / Total time: -5:49
-5:49

Paid episode

The full episode is only available to paid subscribers of The Philosophy Garden: Stoicism and Beyond

Aristotle on pain, pleasure, virtue, and vice

Practical Wisdom podcast, episode 55

“The pleasure or pain that accompanies someone’s deeds ought to be taken as a sign of his characteristics: he who abstains from bodily pleasures and enjoys this very abstention is moderate, but he who is vexed in doing so is licentious; he who endures terrifying things and enjoys doing so, or at any rate is not pained by it, is courageous, but he who is pained thereby is a coward. …

For moral virtue is concerned with pleasures and pains: it is on account of the pleasure involved that we do base things, and it is on account of the pain that we abstain from noble ones. Thus one must be brought up in a certain way straight from childhood, as Plato asserts, so as to enjoy as well as to be pained by what one ought, for this is correct education. …

Listen to this episode with a 7-day free trial

Subscribe to The Philosophy Garden: Stoicism and Beyond to listen to this post and get 7 days of free access to the full post archives.

The Philosophy Garden: Stoicism and Beyond
Practical Wisdom
Practical Wisdom is a short weekly podcast produced by Prof. Massimo Pigliucci of the City College of New York. The idea is to do a deep dive into some of the most crucial philosophical writings of a wide range of Greco-Roman authors in search of insights that may be useful for modern life. Available also on Apple, Google, and Spotify.