Buddha Dharma
Dharma Practitioner
I've often noted the glaring similarities between Epicureanism and the Indian philosophy of Carvaka. For example, both of them were materialist, atomist, and hedonistic. They both believed in the verification of knowledge by what they saw as objective sense impressions. Like you touch a coffee cup and get the impression of it's general properties.
They both entertained agnosticism toward beliefs and premises you couldn't verify through the two means: impression and moral agreement.
However there are some differences too, like the Carvakans being more brashly hedonistic, as well as atheistic. Epicurus was a poly-deist and believed in natural hedonism, within the limits of nature as human reason can hash them out.
The Carvakans were more focused on the death aspect of the notion of one life, so they believed in maximum indulgence, sometimes despite consequences. Epicurus believed in one life too, but he thought it should be a pleasant one, and treated content pleasure as the standard for the universal good. He wanted everyone to have this happiness.
The only reason I wonder about a connection, besides the India-Greece exchanges of ancient times- is that Diogenes notes in Lives of Imminent Philosophers that the other Greek schools doubted the claims of Greek philosophical lineage made by Democritus and Epicurus.
I think the idea of Epicurus making Carvaka more workable is an interesting one.
They both entertained agnosticism toward beliefs and premises you couldn't verify through the two means: impression and moral agreement.
However there are some differences too, like the Carvakans being more brashly hedonistic, as well as atheistic. Epicurus was a poly-deist and believed in natural hedonism, within the limits of nature as human reason can hash them out.
The Carvakans were more focused on the death aspect of the notion of one life, so they believed in maximum indulgence, sometimes despite consequences. Epicurus believed in one life too, but he thought it should be a pleasant one, and treated content pleasure as the standard for the universal good. He wanted everyone to have this happiness.
The only reason I wonder about a connection, besides the India-Greece exchanges of ancient times- is that Diogenes notes in Lives of Imminent Philosophers that the other Greek schools doubted the claims of Greek philosophical lineage made by Democritus and Epicurus.
I think the idea of Epicurus making Carvaka more workable is an interesting one.
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