Abstract
The philosophies of Epicurus and the Buddha aim to free us from suffering by helping us to recognize how ignorance and delusion lead us to pursue harmful desires. Since the problem lies in our attitudes, the solution is to change our attitudes. Like doctors healing the sick, they offer therapeutic practical advice, to remove the groundless opinions and the unhealthy desires that cause suffering. Although various misconceptions may lead us to conceive of these two thinkers as quite different with respect to values and ethics, there are remarkable similarities. Indeed, their practical advice for how to live has the same normative basis: they counsel us to avoid craving and clinging, so that we avoid the harmful ways of living that make most people unhappy. Epicurus and the Buddha advocate a selective elimination of desire, and on the same basis. As we choose how to live, we are like gardeners weeding out harmful desires and cultivating healthy desires that will make our lives flourish. This article clarifies the notions of craving and clinging, which are often conflated in Buddhist studies, and uses them to improve on our understanding of Epicurus’ categorization of desires.
Recommended Citation
ALWOOD, Andrew
(2025)
"Epicurus and the Buddha on Desire,"
Comparative Philosophy: Vol. 16:
Iss.
1, Article 4.
Available at:
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/comparativephilosophy/vol16/iss1/4
Included in
Comparative Philosophy Commons, Ethics and Political Philosophy Commons, History of Philosophy Commons