Epicurus On Pleasure
BORIS NIKOLSKY
ABSTRACT
The paper deals with the question of the attribution to Epicurus of the clas-
sification of pleasures into ‘kinetic’ and ‘static’. This classification, usually regarded
as authentic, confronts us with a number of problems and contradictions. Besides,
it is only mentioned in a few sources that are not the most reliable. Following
Gosling and Taylor, I believe that the authenticity of the classification may be
called in question.
The analysis of the ancient evidence concerning Epicurus’ concept of pleasure
is made according to the following principle: first, I consider the sources that do
not mention the distinction between ‘kinetic’ and ‘static’ pleasures, and only then
do I compare them with the other group of texts which comprises reports by
Cicero, Diogenes Laertius and Athenaeus. From the former group of texts there
emerges a concept of pleasure as a single and not twofold notion, while such
terms as ‘motion’ and ‘state’ describe not two different phenomena but only two
characteristics of the same phenomenon. On the other hand, the reports com-
prising the latter group appear to derive from one and the same doxographical
tradition, and to be connected with the classification of ethical docrines put for-
ward by the Middle Academy and known as the divisio Carneadea. In conclu-
sion, I argue that the idea of Epicurus’ classification of pleasures is based on a
misinterpretation of Epicurus’ concept in Academic doxography, which tended to
contrapose it to doctrines of other schools, above all to the Cyrenaics’ views.
Practically every modern survey of the Epicurean conception of pleasure
begins by saying that Epicurus’ concept of pleasure was twofold: in the
opinion of researchers, Epicurus distinguished two kinds of pleasure – a
‘static’ pleasure or a pleasure ‘in a state of rest’ and a ‘kinetic’ pleasure
or a pleasure ‘in motion.’ We know about this division mainly from one
text – the first two books of Cicero’s dialogue De Finibus Bonorum et
Malorum. In Book 1 of this work
1
one of its characters, an Epicurean by
the name of Lucius Torquatus, gives a definition of two different kinds of
pleasure, one of which suavitate aliqua naturam ipsam movet et iucundi-
tate quadam percipitur sensibus, thus being a pleasure ‘in motion,’
2
while
© Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, 2001 Phronesis XLVI/4
Accepted February 2001.
1
1.37.
2
Throughout his work, Cicero alternatively refers to it as voluptas in motu (2.9, 16
et al.) and movens (2.31).
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