The idea that we should reconceptualize the right to pursue happiness as we see fit, and treat it as a challenge to support some cross-culturally informed goal based on consequences, is loathesomely illiberal. One obvious question is who decides the right consequences, and the impossibility of that task and spectre of foisting its result on people is, hopefully, why we wanted people to be free to decide for themselves. But this whole idea that happiness is something like a mood that precludes sad feelings or frustration is batshit to begin with. Someone recently wrote a popular article about how wrong this is - I'm thinking maybe in the Atlantic? I need to find it. And this is assuming happiness is even a mark of a good life, which is far from agreed upon.
Anyway, this becomes a cultural and political problem when people who share this way of thinking decide that other people's happiness pursuits aren't worthy, and then try to tell them what's good for them. And then people who dislike being condescended to have their own irrational reactions. None of this is helping.Statistics: Posted by Phoebe — Mon Mar 20, 2017 3:39 pm
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