Wednesday, November 30

Philosophy: A Guide to Happiness


This six part series is presented by popular British philosopher Alain de Botton, featuring six thinkers who have influenced history and their ideas about the pursuit of the happy life.


Episode 1: Socrates on Self-Confidence Why do so many people go along with the crowd and fail to stand up for what they truly believe? Partly because they are too easily swayed by other people's opinions and partly because they don't know when to have confidence in their own.

Watch via YouTube



Watch via Google



Episode 2: Epicurus on Happiness British philosopher Alain De Botton discusses the personal implications of the ancient Greek philosopher Epicurus (341-270BCE) who was no epicurean glutton or wanton consumerist,but an advocate of "friends, freedom and thought" as the path to happiness.

Watch via YouTube



Watch via Google



Episode 3: Seneca on Anger Seneca refused to see anger as an irrational outburst over which we have no control. He thought anger arose from certain rationally held ideas about the world, and the problem with these ideas is that they are far too optimistic. Certain things are a predictable feature of life, and to get angry about them is to have unrealistic expectations.

Watch via YouTube



Watch via Google



Episode 4: Montaigne on Self-Esteem looks at the problem of self-esteem from the perspective of Michel de Montaigne (16th Century), the French philosopher who singled out three main reasons for feeling bad about oneself - sexual inadequecy, failure to live up to social norms, and intellectual inferiority - and then offered practical solutions for overcoming them.

Watch via YouTube



Watch via Google



Episode 5: Schopenhauer on Love Alain De Botton surveys the 19th Century German thinker Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860) who believed that love was the most important thing in life because of its powerful impulse towards 'the will-to-life'.

Watch via YouTube



Watch via Google



Episode 6: Nietzsche on Hardship explores Friedrich Nietzsche's (1844-1900) dictum that any worthwhile achievements in life come from the experience of overcoming hardship. For him, any existence that is too comfortable is worthless, as are the twin refugees of drink or religion.

Watch via YouTube


Watch via Google

Blog Archive