Zulfiker’s Blog Post (2:55-4:35)
We discussed about creation myths at the beginning of this semester. In the discussion of Genesis there was a specific question that grabbed my attention. Adam and Eve had all the pleasures because God created the world in good, but if that was the case, why was there a tree of knowledge? Why did God place something cursed and painful in the midst of all the pleasures?
If we carefully observe a person’s life we might discover that if we were to graph the history of that life, it will look something similar to the graph of our heartbeat. It is very rare that a person’s life will have an upward slope of pleasures. We also have to deal with factors similar to that of the tree of knowledge. Some of these factors might cause depression and regrets. According to the hedonistic theory, a person will always pursue something that derives pleasure while avoiding everything that derives pain. However, the “pleasure machine” experiment put forward by the philosopher Robert Nozick in 1974, contradicts the hedonistic theory. This theory claims that even if there was a machine that could be plugged into our brains to receive constant pleasure, most of us would not be willing to plug in such machine. According to this theory experiencing as much pleasure as we want is not all that matters to us. We want to be a certain sort of person by doing certain things and plugging into a pleasure machine limits us to a man-made reality. Therefore:
Is achieving the highest amount of pleasure in one lifetime the ultimate goal of human beings? If a person is successful in avoiding pain, has that person led a successful life? Or is there a deeper meaning of happiness and success?