Law in Contemporary Society

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ThePursuitOfHappiness 2 - 26 Feb 2009 - Main.JustinPurtle
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I had about half a paper written before class on Tuesday when something was brought up that seemed to conflict with some of the basic assumptions of my thesis. Talking about Robinson and whether he is happy or not, Prof. Moglen mentioned in passing that the idea that life is all about happiness is not a universal position and a uniquely American one.
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-- JustinChung - 26 Feb 2009 \ No newline at end of file

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I too struggle with Prof. Moglen's assertion that the pursuit of happiness is a strictly American aspiration and think that happiness is too general a term and can mean too many different things for the ideal to be easily dismissed as a strictly American one. Perhaps the idea that happiness can only be achieved through the collection of material wealth is exclusively American, but surely happiness in a broader sense includes general joy for life and content with one's role in the world. Why would anyone want to live if not to maximize one's enjoyment of life? Even the person motivated by a sense of duty or obligation surely achieves some "happiness" when they make a significant stride forward in their work.

-- JustinPurtle - 26 Feb 2009


ThePursuitOfHappiness 1 - 26 Feb 2009 - Main.JustinChung
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I had about half a paper written before class on Tuesday when something was brought up that seemed to conflict with some of the basic assumptions of my thesis. Talking about Robinson and whether he is happy or not, Prof. Moglen mentioned in passing that the idea that life is all about happiness is not a universal position and a uniquely American one.

I've been thinking about this and can't seem to come up with any approaches toward life that don't have attaining some sort of happiness as a major goal. Maybe I shouldn't use the word happiness, but some sort of personal satisfaction is a universal goal isn't it? Even if you're entirely motivated by a sense of duty or obligation and find no pleasure in the things that you do, surely this means that you're working towards some other type of satisfaction, even if it couldn't really be defined as "happiness"?

Am I just conflating happines or satisfaction with any type of goal, or is there some other life philosophy out there?

-- JustinChung - 26 Feb 2009


Revision 2r2 - 26 Feb 2009 - 01:04:56 - JustinPurtle
Revision 1r1 - 26 Feb 2009 - 00:40:47 - JustinChung
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