The test of
a higher pleasure, according to John Stuart Mill, is that those who have
experienced both the lower and the higher always prefer the higher. So, for
example, a man who could claim categorically that he always prefers the works
of Sophocles to the works of Ibsen can say that, to him, Sophocles constitutes
a higher pleasure than Ibsen.
There are a few problems
with Mill's higher and lower pleasures - not the least of which is comparing
apples and oranges (and oranges and books, and books and holidays, and holidays
and sex, and sex and fast cars - you get the point), and the issue of the distinction
between pleasures necessary for survival (food and drink) and pleasures unnecessary
for survival (Shakespeare and The Beatles) whereby the latter may be higher in terms
of pleasure but lower in terms of necessity.
But the problem I want to
focus on here is the possible bias a Victorian polymath philosopher might have
towards pleasures, compared with, say, a twenty-something working class female
in 2016. Let me first start by trying to identify what I think the best
physical pleasures are. I'm assuming that if it's true for me there's a good
chance it'll be true for others too.
Good sex with someone you
love is right up there with the best physical pleasures, as is eating a
delicious meal when you're famished. Relaxing in a comfy recliner chair after
some hard exercise is a very nice sensation, as is the feeling of freshly
washed and ironed sheets on your skin when you first get into bed. A nice
scenic view is very pleasing, as is cuddling, and doing something kind and
generous for somebody else is highly rewarding too (you may want to classify
the last one as an emotional pleasure).
But what about the
intellectual pleasures associated with things like philosophy, art and
literature? Is the complete works of Shakespeare a higher pleasure than the
complete works of Alan Bennett or the complete box set of Nicolas Cage films?
Is Van Morrison's Astral Weeks or Radiohead's OK Computer a higher
pleasure-pairing than David Bowie's two Tin Machine albums?
John Stuart's Mill's test
of a higher pleasure - those who have experienced both the lower and the higher
always prefer the higher - may not apply to a man who loves Nicolas Cage films
and is bored stiff by Shakespeare. It may be very difficult to get him to
prefer reading Hamlet to watching Con-Air. In what has become a hugely famous
quote, John Stuart Mill explains how we understand and not understand higher
pleasures:
"It is better to be a human being dissatisfied
than a pig satisfied; better to be Socrates dissatisfied than a fool satisfied.
And if the fool, or the pig, is of a different opinion, it is only because they
only know their own side of the question.”
I think a good way to
frame it would be like this. We can accept that there are people who prefer the
complete works of Shakespeare and people who prefer the complete box set of
Nicolas Cage films - but if you found people that know them both, and asked
them whether they would choose to spend the rest of their life in the Lake
District with only the complete works of Shakespeare or the complete box set of
Nicolas Cage films, the vast majority would choose Shakespeare.
The reason being, of
course - it would not be difficult to find out that works of genius like
Shakespeare's plays are imbued with possibly unsurpassed deep and enriching
qualities that get right to the heart of the psychology of being human, and the
important questions of life that we grapple with.
Why is it, then, that in
these modern times (particularly) more people seem to gravitate towards the
easier and more superficial pleasures over the arguably more rewarding and
deeper pleasures? I think there are two main reasons. The first, and probably
the lesser of the two reasons, is that people are getting a smidgen of those
rewarding and deeper pleasures in their more superficial pleasures - be they
books, TV shows, movies or video games.
The second, and I think by
far the primary factor, is that when it comes to straightforward simple
pleasures that demand little brainwork versus the more complex intellectually
satisfying pleasures, humans have a tendency to favour the path of least
resistance. Or to put it another way, when faced with the immediate prospect of
watching Citizen Kane or Face Off, more people would choose Face Off because,
although Citizen Kane may turn out to be ultimately more artistically
nourishing, it's a lot easier to relax on the sofa with a beer watching an
action movie like Face Off.
Implicit in this is the
phenomenon known as hyperbolic discounting - the tendency humans have to prefer
current rewards over distant rewards of a higher value. So for example, if I
offered you £100 tomorrow or £110 this time year next year you'd probably pick
£100 now. But if I offered you £100 on this day in 2017 or £110 the day after
in 2017, you'd quite rationally choose the latter. Humans are said to discount
the value of the later reward by a factor that increases with the length of the
delay.
Psychologist Daniel Read
of Warwick Business School
and his colleagues have conducted experiments that indicate a connection between
hyperbolic discounting and why we are more likely to choose a film like Face
Off over a film like Citizen Kane the majority of the time.
What Read and his colleagues
found was that experimental participants (students, from what I recall), when given
the opportunity to select a film like Citizen Kane or Face Off to watch next
weekend, were more likely to choose the highbrow film. But when the weekend
arrived, they often changed their minds if given the option.
I think hyperbolic
discounting has a lot to do with why so many people tread along nicely with the
lower pleasures like surfing YouTube for funny videos when ultimately they'd
find life more enriching if they pursued the higher pleasures. There is a human
habit to suppress those deeper desires for fulfilment whereby what wins through
more often than not is the seduction of the low hanging fruit.
For many it would take
being stuck on an island or in a log cabin with a choice of lower or higher
pleasures before they invested their time in the indulgences of the higher
pleasures. But those higher pleasures definitely do exist; even if, prior to
the effort of commitment, they can be quite abstruse and arcane.
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