The word pleasure means a state of enjoying, satisfaction, sex… When I first think about it, I think as it is a way of having fun from something simple. I don't think pleasure is like passion. It doesn't have to mean you a lot. It isn't a wish or a goal or a life time wish. It is just finding joy from something simple and good enough to satisfy you. I concerned about it because in my mind the first definition that came up to my mind was sex. I was prejudiced about this word. But why should I be? That's why I chose it. I pushed myself a bit to do my search with pleasure. If we don't know exactly what is pleasure means we can concerned about it. Unknown makes fears and fears make us prejudice. We need facts to believe and find out our truths. I take a risk at least for me so my journey began.
We can use pleasure in really different ways. It doesn't mean satisfaction all the time. You may say ‘it was a pleasure to meet you.' You don't say that because you felt satisfied. You say that because you need to act politely even you don't like the person you met. It's a matter of respect. But you can also use pleasure in finding joy in your life such as ‘I find joy when I am with my friends.' In that case pleasure means having fun and feeling good. But as my searches took me all I found was the title Guilty Pleasure in everywhere so I found an article about because I wanted to learn more about guilty pleasure. Everyone has a guilty pleasure that was the main thing that I learned. In 1860's guilty pleasure used for brothels, so it was improper word to use. But as the time pass it changed its meaning. You can use guilty pleasure as: ‘my guilty pleasure is eating McDonald's.' In 21. Century guilty pleasure means a doing something that gives p...
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...portant bases of pleasure. Such as pleasures of reading; ‘Reading may be a compulsion for a school going child, pastime for a retired person, but a pleasure for many. You can discover simile on the face of novel- reader, a gleam in the eyes of the reader of a poem and furrow of seriousness on the forehead of a person reading a newspaper report. Reading disturbs mind and heart. Waves of thinking and emotion are generated by reading. So the pleasure is immediate and it continues to linger in the mind.’ Our emotions controls everything and finding pleasure is all about emotions. Books take us to new journeys and make us smile. “Reading well is one of the great pleasures that solitude can afford you.” Harold Bloom. We can found love, friendship, adventure, courage all of the things that make us smile and make us excited. Those are the greatest pleasures in our worlds.
Timothy Brook’s book, The Confusions of Pleasure: Commerce and Culture in Ming China is a detailed account of the three centuries of the Ming Dynasty in China. The book allows an opportunity to view this prominent time period of Chinese history. Confusions of Pleasure not only chronicles the economic development during the Ming dynasty, but also the resulting cultural and social changes that transform the gentry and merchant class. Brook’s insights highlight the divide between the Ming dynasty’s idealized beliefs, and the realities of its economic expansion and its effects. Brook describes this gap through the use of several first hand accounts of individuals with various social statuses.
Another problem is that some pleasures are more alluring than others. Pleasure does not deal with just quantity, quality is also important. The old saying, “You ...
... making actual decisions, not selecting favourable experiences (which remain unchanged over the course of two years). In reality, relationships provide richness to pleasure, heightening it further than any fake pleasure could have been. There is always the challenge of trying, learning, failing and finally achieving. This achievement provides greater pleasure as well because one is able to distinguish between the lowest level (failure) and the overcoming of it at its highest level (achievement). Hedonists should see that it is important to be in tune with the entirety of reality, instead of just experiencing certain aspects of it.
Happiness is intended pleasure or absence of pain.(513) Both this definition and the following definition for unhappiness suffer from really understanding what pleasure and pain are, the use of competent judges and those principles below aid in that.(513)
...uman a relaxing feeling of happiness. This is also counted as a reward and the human isn’t consciously aware of it, but he is aware of it subconsciously and he might be doing it intentionally without being aware of it.
...as ranking your pleasures in order from greatest to least, which will result in a clear answer as to what is most pleasurable.
Most people think that the highest end is a life of pleasure. Hedonists have defined happiness as " an equivalent to the totality of pleasurable or agreeable feeling.';(Fox, 3) Some pleasures are good and contribute to happiness. Not all ends are ultimate ends but the highest end would have to be something ultimate; the only conceivable ultimate end is happiness.
Moving on to, Satisfaction. Satisfaction is a highly subjective premise, but it has some fundamental carriage; for all humans, satisfaction is most basically a feeling of contentment and a fulfillment of their expectations and a pleasure derived from the same.
The sensations according to Wundt resulted from stimulation of a sense organ. He construed that the sensations go hand in hand with the feelings. The feelings could take the form of excitement-calm, pleasantness-unpleasantness, and straining-relaxation. The feelings and sensations according to Wundt were informed by experiences and the anatomical makeup of an individual. He called the voluntary concentration to elements as apperception, and free will modification of the elements as creative synthesi...
In the book, The How of Happiness, author and researcher Sonja Lyubomirsky sets her book apart from other self-awareness books by being the first to utilize empirical studies. She uses data gained through scientific method to provide support for her hypothesis. This hypothesis consists mainly of the idea that we have the ability to overcome genetic predisposition and circumstantial barriers to happiness by how we think and what we do. She emphasizes that being happier benefits ourselves, our family and our community. “The How of Happiness is science, and the happiness-increasing strategies that [she] and other social psychologists have developed are its key supporting players” (3).
Stanford Encyclopaedia of Philosophy (2006), Suffering [Online], Metaphysics Research Lab, Available at: http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/pleasure/ [3 May 2008].
Mill’s qualitative hedonism of pleasures faces problems because of its lack of clarity in its description of pleasures, mainly because it seems that his idea of pleasure seems to encompass such a wide range of mental states. He also loses credibility with his controversial competent judges, and especially the inconsistency with a more textbook view of hedonism.
Utopians make a distinction between true and counterfeit pleasure. True pleasure involves any movement of body or mind in which a person takes a natural delight, such as reflecting on true knowledge, eating well, or exercising. Counterfeit pleasures are those sensations that are not naturally delightful, but that distorted desires have tricked people into believing they pleasurable.
We place an enormous value on our happiness. .For centuries mankind has been on a philosophical quest to find happiness. Arristippus ancient philosopher, and founder of hedonism the school of philosophy, echoed this sentiment when he said "the art of life lies in taking in pleasures as they pass." Arristippus concluded that the ultimate telos or goal for humans is happiness derived from pleasure. pleasure seekers by nature; we actively seek pleasurable experiences. Conversely we run away from the bad and the painful ones.
According to Freud, conflict is produced in each individual by the demands of his construct as he tries to meet the requirements that civilization imposes. The conflict, ultimately, is solved, but at the expense of each individual's happiness. For Freud, happiness is the purpose of life. He also sees that the purpose of life is the program of the pleasure principle. The pleasure principle is that humans seek to attain happiness because it is the absence of pain and displeasure, and happiness evokes strong feelings of pleasure. He writes,