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[ ♫ Gentle Music ♫ ]
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Narrator: Ever since ancient times
human beings have looked to
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philosophy for the secret of happiness,
but few philosophers have
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come up with more suggestive
or more relevant answers than
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one born on the Greek island of Samos,
off the coast of modern Turkey,
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three hundred and forty one years
before the birth of Christ .
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His name was Epicurus.
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Very little about him has survived;
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all of his books have been lost
across the centuries,
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leaving his philosophy of happiness to be
reconstructed from just a few fragments.
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Epicurus believed that we could all
find a way to be happy; the problem was,
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quite simply, that we were looking
in the wrong place.
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[♫♫]
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Unlike many philosophers, Epicurus' idea
of happiness actually sounds rather fun,
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he didn't think we should feel guilty
about wanting to have a pleasurable,
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enjoyable life and promised that he
could show us how to.
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Of course you might wonder why you
need a philosopher at all to teach you how
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to have a good time.
We seem to think that the key to happiness
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is really pretty easy;
its all about having a lot of money,
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so we can come to places like this,
and go shopping.
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But before we reach for our wallets,
Epicurus wanted us to stop and think;
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it's easy to imagine that money
can solve everything, but can it?
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[ ♫ Singing in Greek ♫ ]
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Epicurus was committed to a life of happiness;
he liked sex, laughter and beauty, but
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crucially spent his time pointing out that
happiness is in fact, rather a tricky issue,
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and a philosopher might help you to find it
more easily than a credit card ever could.
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That Epicurus was in favour of pleasure
at all shocked many of his ancient Greek
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contemporaries, his philosophy became
synonymous with a lotus eating lifestyle.
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To this day, people who love luxurious
eating and drinking can sometimes be
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described as Epicurean, in fact that's
a complete misunderstanding.
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[♫ Singing continues ♫ ]
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Botton: Epicurus said that pleasure was the
most important thing in life, and yet if
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we actually look at the way that he lived,
it seems he lived far from a
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luxurious life. His house was very
simple, his clothes were extremely basic,
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he always drank water rather than wine,
he found fish much too expensive and
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he was happy just eating meals with bread,
vegetables and a few olives.
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He once asked a friend, send me a pot
of cheese, so that I can have a feast
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whenever I like, these were the kinds
of tastes of a man who would describe
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pleasure as the end of life.
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Narrator: At the heart of Epicurus' philosophy
is a simple thought: that we aren't very
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good at knowing what will make us happy,
that we may feel powerfully drawn towards
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material things, and be convinced that
they are what we require to be happy.
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We’re often wrong, what we want is not
always what we need, and nothing shows
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that up more starkly than our impulse
to go shopping.
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Steven: I like shopping, most weeks it’s
just a couple of bags but sometimes it’s,
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I don’t know like ten/twelve bags a time,
I like designer names.
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Dolce and Gabanna stuff, these clothes,
DKNY and I love Gucci clothes as well.
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Narrator : Steven Perry is a hairdresser from
Liverpool who spends all his spare time shopping.
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Steven: I suppose I could resist, but usually
I don't, usually I just go in and shop anywhere.
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Although when I go out buying all this stuff,
it makes me happy, at the end of the
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month when the credit card
and the store card bills and the
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loan payments come out, stuff like that,
then that doesn’t make me happy because
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I see how much is going out, every month
on debt.
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[ Indistinct Talking ]
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Botton: How many watches have you got?
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Steven: Not really that many, probably
about ten. Something like that.
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Botton: You've only got ten watches?
Steven: Only ten
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Botton: I've only got one!
What’s the one you’re wearing now?
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Steven: A spoon watch at the minute,
I like this just for general everyday
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because it’s only like ninety nine
pounds and...
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Narrator: Steven often gets into debt and
I couldn't help wondering if his desire
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to go shopping might be
a bit out of control.
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Botton: So if that’s the everyday watch,
what’s the fancy watch?
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Steven: The thousand pound Tag watch
-- Oh my God, that’s amazing, so what’s
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the craziest thing you've bought in
terms of like, bad impulse buying?
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A pair of shorts.
-- From where?
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Umm, from a shopping mall in Liverpool, I'll
show you them, they didn’t have my size,
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so I thought these’ll fit me,
but you put them on and they just tend
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to look truly horrendous,
like cycling shorts, sorta thing.
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Botton: How much did they cost?
-- God, I don’t know, about fifty pounds?
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Fifty sixty quid, something like that.
They were never taken back,
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the same as these jeans; I
think these have still got the labels on.
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I just got these home and they didn't fit
miles too long and miles too big.
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I did mean to take them back
but I don’t like taking things back.
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Narrator: Do you ever get home and think
I'm surrounded by shopping bags
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and you’re thinking God,
what am I going to do with all this?
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--Yeah, especially when you come home and
you've just got bags everywhere
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and you think, Why have I spent all that?
And the credit card bill comes at the
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end of the month and you think,
Oh! Why did I spend all that?
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Narrator: In a way we're all a bit
like Steven, people who shop too much;
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Epicurus thought he knew why.
We don’t understand what we really
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need and so fall prey to manic substitute
desires for huge numbers of ill-fitting
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trousers or countless pairs of shoes.
But Epicurus declared that he had
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actually discovered what we did need,
and luckily for anyone without
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much money, the ingredients of
happiness come pretty cheap.
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The first ingredient we need is friends.
Epicurus took the idea of friendship
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very seriously, so seriously that
he made an extremely radical innovation.
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When he came to Athens in 306 BC
at the age of 35, he bought a large house
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just outside the city of Athens, this
place here which he called ‘The Garden’;
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of course at that time it was rather
beautiful, more beautiful than it is now,
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where it seems to be a taxi graveyard.
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What he did, was that he bought this house
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and asked a group of friends
to move in with him.
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The house was quite large, so there was
room enough for everyone to have
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their own quarters at the same time
as coming together for meals and
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conversations in the common rooms
of the house.
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What Epicurus was doing was picking up
on a rather common sense point,
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which is that friends are a
major source of happiness.
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But I think where he was distinctive was
in his idea that in order
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to really benefit from friends,
you had to see them not just occasionally
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not just for the odd drink in a bar
or the odd chat on the phone,
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he had to be with his friends at all
times, so they’d be permanent companions.
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And I think that was his distinctive
idea of happiness.
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Narrator: You wouldn't catch Epicurus
devouring lunch on his own in a burger bar;
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he recommended that we try
never even to eat a snack alone.
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Before you eat or drink anything, he said,
Consider carefully who you eat or drink with,
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rather than what you eat or drink,
for feeding without a friend is the life
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of a lion or a wolf.
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[ ♫♫ ]
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Narrator: The second thing Epicurus thought
we needed to be happy was freedom and
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in order to achieve it,
he and his friends decided to
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leave Athens altogether.
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For them, to be free meant to be financially
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independent, economically self-sufficient,
not answerable to horrible bosses
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for their income,
so they resolved to leave city life,
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and its competitive and gossipy atmosphere
behind them once and for all.
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So they left Athens and started
what could best be described as a commune.
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We must free ourselves from the prison
of everyday life and politics,
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Epicurus wrote, and that’s
precisely what they did.
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The life was simple,
but at least they enjoyed their freedom.
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They didn’t mind if they looked shabby, or
didn’t have as much money as other people,
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because they were self-sufficient,
and had gained their independence
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from what other people thought.
There was, in a financial sense,
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nothing to prove.
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Epicurus believed there was a third
ingredient necessary for happiness,
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and that was an analysed life.
By which he meant a life in which
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we take time off to reflect on our
worries, to analyse what is troubling us.
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Our anxieties quickly diminish if we give
ourselves time to think them through.
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And to do that we need to take
a step back from the noisy distractions
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of the commercial world, and to find time
and space for quiet thinking
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about our lives.
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Of course, having loads of money
has never made anyone unhappy,
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but I think the lovely idea in
Epicurus is that if you’re denied money
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for whatever reason, and yet you have
his 3 goods, that is you’ve got friends,
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you’ve got an analysed life,
and you’re self-sufficient,
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then you’ll never be denied happiness.
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And conversely, if you’ve got loads of
money but you’re lacking friends,
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you haven’t got a self-sufficient life,
you’re not doing a lot of analysing,
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then you’ll never be happy,
according to Epicurus.
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So if we try and draw this relationship
between happiness and money on a graph,
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imagine that on this side of the graph
you’ve got levels of happiness,
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and then on this side you’ve got
levels of income, for Epicurus,
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so long as you’ve got enough money
to provide you with the essentials of life
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you can start to be happy fairly early on,
if you have his 3 goods.
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You won’t get any happier the more
money you accumulate,
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the level of happiness stays pretty steady.
However, if you’ve got loads of money,
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yet you haven’t got any friends,
you’re not self-sufficient,
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you’ve got loads of anxieties,then
you’re level of happiness
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is going to stay very flat.
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And I think that’s a lovely consoling idea
for anyone who’s either worried about
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the fact that they may lose their money
or is denied the chance to make any.
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Narrator: But if the ingredients of happiness
are so simple, why aren't
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more of us actually happy?
Epicurus blamed advertising.
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As we've just seen, advertising can be
enormously seductive;
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it tends to make us feel that there are
all sorts of things missing from our lives.
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But Epicurus insisted that we only need
three things to be happy:
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friends, freedom and an analysed life.
If he's right, why then do
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we want to shop so much?
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Epicurus' answer would be that the
commercial world slyly associates the things
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it wants to sell us with the things
it knows that we need.
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So for example, this might persuade
us to buy Bacardi,
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but only by blurring the fact that its
really the friends that we're looking for.
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This one tries to sell us perfume
by naming it after the thing
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we're all really after: freedom.
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And this one flogs us whiskey by promising
the calm resolution of our problems
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that only an analysed life
could bring us.
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And it's this blurring of our
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desires that makes us so confused
about what it is we want.
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What are the most important things
that make you happy?
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--Umm, the people around me, if
theyre happy then I'm happy, umm,
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and like if works going good then
that makes me happy as well.
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But do you ever think,
what if I threw all this away,
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threw all that away, all these jumpers,
and just concentrated on getting work right,
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getting a family and friends right
I would never have to go to the
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Trafford centre again.
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Steven: Yeah, because if I shop to cheer myself
up, if I'm already happy then I dont need
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to cheer myself up do I?
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Steven: So at the minute Im fairly happy so I'm
not shopping quite as much as I used to,
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but who's to say that next week
something might happen and then
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I'll just have to go and shop.
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Epicurus may have lived more than
two thousand years ago but he would've
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understood the pressures that make people
like Steven shop so much, and he had a bold
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and practical solution to counter them.
The place to find it is here in a dusty
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and remote corner of South-Western Turkey.
That Epicurus should still speak to us
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at all is something of a miracle,
as every one of the three hundred books
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that he wrote has been lost. But his
philosophy developed into a kind of creed,
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almost like a religion, and remained
popular for some four hundred years.
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Epicurean communities were founded in places
like this, all across the ancient world. And
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it's largely thanks to them that fragments
of what Epicurus wrote have survived.
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Narrator: I've come with local Archaeologist
Mustufu Adak to see the ruins of .
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the ancient town of Oinoanda.
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Oinoanda was once home to
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twenty five thousand people;
a place with a lavish theatre,
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a busy market place, or agora,
and a huge aquaduct.
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It was also home to a follower
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of Epicurus' philosophy, one of the
wealthiest citizens of the town,
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a man called Diogenes, of Oinoanda.
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Around the AD 120s, this Diogenes took
a highly unusual decision,
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he paid for an enormous wall to be put
up as part of a giant structure
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known as a Stoa, on which he
had inscribed Epicurus'
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entire philosophy of happiness,
so that all the citizens of his town
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could learn and be inspired by it.
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Botton: Where are we walking now?
Mustufu: We are walking now in the old agora
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where Diogenes had his Stoa.
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Botton: What we're seeing now
is bits of the wall.
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Mustufu: This wall was broken up by an earthquake,
most probably,
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and there are more than
two-hundred fragments of the inscription.
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This is one of the fragments;
this is the beginning of the inscription.
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Botton: And this is where
Diogenes tries to explain why he
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put up the wall in the first place
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Mustufu: Yes, hes saying that if there
were one or two persons who are lost,
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he could educate them personally,
but there are more, many people,
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So he decided to put up this stone.
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So if there were just one or two people
who didn't know how to be happy,
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he'd go and talk to them,
but because there are so many the best way
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to help them is to actually put up
a wall in the middle of the town.
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That's right, that's the explanation
he gives here in this part.
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Botton: What a lovely thing to do.
Diogenes was acting on a crucial
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idea in Epicurus, that in order to live
wisely, it isn't enough just to read a
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philosophical argument once or twice;
we need constant reminders
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of it, or we'll forget.
When we're encouraged to go shopping
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by bright lights and inviting displays
we're quickly liable to lose
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sight of our true desires.
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So we have to counteract the influence
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of advertising by creating advertisements
which say what we really do need,
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and that's why Diogenes put up his wall.
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Mustufu: ...and I think this door collapsed then.
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Botton: What is this here?
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Mustufu: This is another very
fascinating fragment...
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Narrator: The massive limestone wall
originally stood right next
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to the marketplace of the town.
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Inhabitants shopping in the
boutiques of Oinoanda
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were warned to expect little
happiness from the activity.
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Luxurious food and drinks, says one
fragment, in no way protect you from harm;
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wealth beyond what is natural is no more
use than an over-flowing container.
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Real value is generated not by
theatres and bars, perfumes and ointments,
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but by philosophy.
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The wall may have crumbled into ruin,
but movingly the ideas inscribed
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on it retain their life and their relevance.
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Botton: It strikes me as a real
paradox really,
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that you would've had where people
were doing their shopping,
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they're sort of carrying their shopping,
and then on the wall you've got these
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reminders that shopping is
not necessarily going to make you happy.
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Mustufu: Yes, the letters of the inscription
were red so that everyone could see them...
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Oh right, so it was all written in red?
Mustufu: In red yes.
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So you really could have seen it,
you could've been at the other side
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of the marketplace and you would’ve
seen that there was this kind
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of advertisement almost,
for Epicureanism on the wall.
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Botton: It must've been a beautiful spot;
I mean to have not only philosophy
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enlightening you but also a fantastic
view onto the surrounding countryside.
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I can imagine it would've been easy to be
wise, not easy but easier to be wise here.
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I would've done less shopping if
I had this wall and this surrounding.
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Botton: It's a pity they didn't do it
more, and that they dont do it today,
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I think its a lovely idea.
Mustufu: Yes
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Narrator: If Epicurus and his followers had
been alive today they wouldn't have been
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sniffy about advertising, they
would've enlisted it for their own ends.
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And for the same reason that
Diogenes built his wall:
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to counter the constant inducements
to go shopping with some
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equal inducements to live philosophically.
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Man: First idea is basically try
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ironic statements like,
shop your blues away.
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Narrator: I've come to the kind of place
were Epicureans might have turned:
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the offices of the advertising agency
St. Lukes, to get ideas for creating some
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modern public reminders of
how to live wisely.
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The first idea their creative team
came up with was a sarcastic campaign,
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satirising the materialistic messages of
most ads.
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Woman: This is really powerful,
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certainly in production terms it takes a
number of additions
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but its very very cheap.
Man: And then a bit more challenging,
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be happy with shopping, TV and
yearly holidays.
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Botton: Right, I love that, that really
does sum it all up, doesn't it?
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Man: I thought this was the strongest-
fill the void in your life with a product
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Botton: And youd have shops advertising,
shops selling these kind of products
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and then this stark reminder that
perhaps it's not really
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going to fill any void.
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Its brilliant, thank you Steve.
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Man: The most obvious idea was just
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to take luxury items and goods and
somehow undermine them or show them
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for being a bit shallow or a
bit kind of, empty inside.
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The best example we've got is something
like this, just taking a lovely image of a
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beautiful house and just using the
language of advertising,
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the caveat is, batteries not included, and
just changing it to happiness not included.
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Botton: Right, I really like that,
in a way that says it all doesn't it?
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It says, it keeps that subtlety
of Epicureanism, which is,
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you could be happy in a house like that,
but it's not included.
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It's not saying that you won't be happy in
that house, which would be sort of Marxism,
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it's just saying it's not included
so you better watch out before
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you spend all your energies
trying to get this house.
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Narrator: Unfortunately philosophers have rarely
had much money for advertising campaigns,
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but imagine a world where instead
of being surrounded by adverts
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selling you watches, cars or fancy holidays.
these ads remind you of how important
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it is to value friends to escape
the rat race or reflect on your problems
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and didn't just use these genuinely nice
things to sell you aftershave or aperitifs.
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It's hard to know whether
the people of Oinoanda
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discovered what they did need and ceased
buying what they didn't because of a
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giant advertisement in their midst.
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But Epicurus' central message seems,
if anything, more relevant to today's
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consumer society than it did to his own,
and theres no reason to believe
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that happiness is any more included in the
many more things we can buy.
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Of course, putting up one poster
in the Trafford centre in Manchester
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couldn't on its own turn back
the tide of consumerism and,
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although shoppers seemed interested
in what my ad was trying to say,
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I didn't see much evidence of
people stopping shopping.
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But the fact remains,
we're horribly confused about
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what could make us happy,
if we really knew what we needed
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there are few things we'd
be desperate to buy.
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Botton: Epicurus makes us think very
carefully about the merits of our own society,
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of course these societies are enormously
wealthy, we can buy almost anything
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we want in a place like this, full
of colourful shops selling wonderfully
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well produced goods, and
yet what Epicurus wants us to think is,
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do places like this really provide
us with the key ingredients of happiness,
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and he thought, and I think he was right,
that they don't.
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Happiness may be difficult to attain,
Epicurus admitted that,
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but he insisted that the obstacles
are not primarily financial.