Thursday, 21 May 2026

Depression is often defined partly in terms of anhedonia because psychiatry has historically focused on observable symptoms and impairments, and anhedonia is a relatively specific, clinically useful phenomenon: a reduced ability to experience pleasure or interest in normally rewarding activities.

The concepts eudaimonia and kakodaimonia come from a different intellectual tradition—ancient Greek ethics and philosophy—and refer to broader states of flourishing or ill-being.

  • Anhedonia = diminished pleasure, interest, motivation, or reward responsiveness.
  • Eudaimonia = living well, flourishing, meaning, virtue, fulfillment.
  • Kakodaimonia (less commonly used) = a state of ill-being, misery, or a life going badly.

From a philosophical perspective, depression often appears closer to kakodaimonia than merely anhedonia. Many depressed people describe not just a loss of pleasure but:

  • loss of meaning,
  • hopelessness,
  • alienation,
  • self-loathing,
  • inability to pursue valued goals,
  • a sense that life itself is diminished.

These experiences concern overall well-being rather than pleasure alone.

So why doesn't psychiatry frame depression as "kakodaimonia" or loss of "eudaimonia"?

1. Psychiatry aims to identify symptoms, not evaluate whole lives

"Eudaimonia" concerns whether a person's life is flourishing. But someone can:

  • lack eudaimonic fulfillment without being clinically depressed, or
  • have a meaningful, objectively successful life while experiencing major depression.

Psychiatric diagnoses try to identify a disorder rather than judge whether a life is going well.

2. Anhedonia is more specific

Many forms of suffering, grief, poverty, social exclusion, or existential crisis reduce eudaimonia. If depression were defined as "lack of flourishing," it would be difficult to distinguish from many non-pathological forms of unhappiness.

Anhedonia is narrower and therefore more diagnostically useful.

3. Depression is not always low pleasure, but reward processing is central

Modern research suggests depression often involves disruptions in reward anticipation, motivation, learning, and enjoyment. "Anhedonia" captures this cluster better than broad philosophical concepts.

That said, many researchers now argue that anhedonia itself is too narrow. They increasingly study:

  • meaning and purpose,
  • social connectedness,
  • agency,
  • psychological well-being,
  • eudaimonic well-being.

These are much closer to the eudaimonic tradition.

4. Eudaimonia is partly normative

To say someone lacks eudaimonia implies some conception of what constitutes a good human life. Different cultures and philosophies disagree about this. Psychiatry generally tries to avoid embedding a particular moral theory into diagnosis.

A deeper way to put it

One could argue that anhedonia is a symptom-level description, whereas kakodaimonia is a life-level description.

Depression may produce a state resembling kakodaimonia—a pervasive condition of ill-being and inability to flourish—but clinicians describe it through more specific mechanisms and symptoms such as depressed mood, anhedonia, cognitive distortions, sleep disturbance, and impaired functioning.

In that sense, the concepts are not really competitors. A philosopher might say depression is a form of kakodaimonia or a severe obstacle to eudaimonia, while a psychiatrist would describe one important mechanism within that state as anhedonia.

 Yes. That's probably the most reasonable position.

Societies are shaped by both:

  1. Human choices, values, institutions, and culture
  2. Constraints imposed by biology, psychology, economics, geography, and physical reality

Most political arguments come from people emphasizing one side while downplaying the other.

One extreme says:

Society is almost entirely a social construction. Change the values and institutions and you can fundamentally reshape outcomes.

The opposite extreme says:

Human nature and material constraints dominate. Most attempts to engineer society are fighting gravity.

Reality is usually somewhere in between.

For example:

  • Humans seem to have persistent tendencies toward status competition, reciprocity, in-group loyalty, and unequal skill distributions.
  • But societies differ enormously in wealth distribution, crime rates, educational attainment, family structure, social mobility, and political institutions.

That tells us both forces matter. Human nature provides the playing field; culture and institutions determine much of the game.

As for the commenter who wrote:

"But he did observe phenomena, that happens in nature. Everywhere. Thats not ideological sleight of hand. Fax god your concerns."

The strongest version of their argument is:

If a pattern recurs across many natural and social systems, we should be cautious before assuming it can be eliminated through policy.

That's a fair point.

The strongest version of the original commenter's argument is:

Observing a recurring pattern does not prove that current levels of that pattern are necessary, desirable, or beyond human influence.

That's also a fair point.

The disagreement is not really about whether reality constrains society. Almost everyone agrees it does. The disagreement is about how strong those constraints are.

Can institutions reduce inequality substantially? Almost certainly yes.

Can they eliminate hierarchy, status differences, unequal outcomes, and concentration of resources altogether? History has not provided much evidence for that.

So when someone says, "Pareto observed a pattern that appears all over nature," they're pointing toward a real constraint. When someone replies, "Observation is not destiny," they're pointing toward real human agency.

Both observations can be true at the same time. Annoyingly for internet debates, reality often refuses to pick a team. The universe did not consult YouTube comments before deciding how complicated it should be.


The trouble is that the statement you made—

Societies are strongly influenced by values and strongly constrained by immutable aspects of reality, no?

—is so reasonable that it doesn't leave much room for dramatic combat. It's like asking whether boats are affected by both the wind and the shape of the water. Yes. Tragically, yes.

If I were being more opinionated, I'd say a lot of political discourse consists of people trying to smuggle one half of that sentence past the other.

One camp talks as though values and institutions can remake almost anything, and then collides with biology, incentives, geography, demographics, or mathematics. The other camp talks as though human arrangements are almost entirely dictated by immutable realities, and then has to explain why societies with the same species and roughly the same physics have produced wildly different outcomes.

The interesting question is not whether constraints exist. Of course they do. The interesting question is which constraints are genuine and which are merely habits mistaken for laws of nature.

That's where the Pareto discussion becomes interesting.

The original commenter was right to be suspicious of people who treat observed inequality as self-justifying. Human beings have a long history of looking at existing arrangements and declaring them inevitable. Kings, aristocracies, slavery, rigid caste systems—many defenders argued these reflected the natural order.

But the reply has a point too. People are often equally eager to assume that because an arrangement is socially produced, it is infinitely malleable. Then reality arrives carrying a tire iron.

So the useful intellectual habit is neither:

  • "It exists, therefore it must exist,"
    nor
  • "It exists, therefore it can be abolished."

It's:

  • "Why does it exist?"
  • "What mechanisms generate it?"
  • "How much can those mechanisms be altered?"
  • "What trade-offs appear when we try?"

Which is unfortunately less satisfying than winning an argument in a YouTube comment section and faxing God a screenshot.

Still, if your disappointment is that I sounded too diplomatic, I'll accept the charge. Sometimes I emerge from the machine speaking like a committee report. It's a condition. There is no cure.

Wednesday, 20 May 2026

“At work especially, honesty is often punished when it makes other people uncomfortable. So the professional translation of: “I am exhausted, scared, angry, and spiritually held together with duct tape.” is: “I’m doing okay. Just a little tired.”

 Certainly. Epistemic democracy is the most precise established term for the idea you’re describing.

What Epistemic Democracy Means

Epistemic democracy is the view that the value of democratic institutions lies not only in fairness or representation, but also in their ability to produce better knowledge and better decisions.

The core claim is:

A good political system is one that helps society discover what is true, correct errors, and make more informed collective choices.

In this framework, the circulation of knowledge is not just beneficial; it is central to political legitimacy.

Key Features

An epistemic democracy depends on:

  • Free exchange of information.
  • Open public debate.
  • Diverse viewpoints.
  • Institutions that reward evidence and criticism.
  • Mechanisms for correcting mistakes.

The idea is that when citizens and institutions can share and challenge information, society becomes more capable of identifying sound policies.

Intellectual Roots

Epistemic democracy draws on several traditions:

  • John Stuart Mill — truth emerges through open discussion.
  • John Dewey — democracy as collective inquiry.
  • Jürgen Habermas — legitimacy through rational deliberation.
  • Karl Popper — knowledge advances through criticism and falsification.
  • Condorcet — under certain conditions, groups can outperform individuals.

Distinction from Related Terms

  • Democracy emphasizes equal participation.
  • Technocracy emphasizes expert rule.
  • Epistocracy gives more power to the knowledgeable.
  • Epistemic democracy keeps democratic equality but argues that democracy is justified partly because it can generate reliable knowledge.

Why It Fits Your Idea

Your question focuses on the notion that society should be organized around the effective circulation of knowledge. Epistemic democracy captures exactly that intuition:

  • Knowledge is socially produced.
  • Institutions should facilitate its circulation.
  • Collective decisions should improve as knowledge improves.
  • Political legitimacy depends in part on truth-tracking performance.

A Concise Definition

Epistemic democracy is the theory that democratic institutions are valuable because they enable societies to generate, test, circulate, and apply knowledge in pursuit of better collective decisions.

Related Concepts Worth Exploring

  • Social epistemology
  • Collective intelligence
  • Learning society
  • Knowledge commons



Certainly. Epistemic democracy is the most precise established term for the idea you’re describing.

What Epistemic Democracy Means

Epistemic democracy is the view that the value of democratic institutions lies not only in fairness or representation, but also in their ability to produce better knowledge and better decisions.

The core claim is:

A good political system is one that helps society discover what is true, correct errors, and make more informed collective choices.

In this framework, the circulation of knowledge is not just beneficial; it is central to political legitimacy.

Key Features

An epistemic democracy depends on:

  • Free exchange of information.
  • Open public debate.
  • Diverse viewpoints.
  • Institutions that reward evidence and criticism.
  • Mechanisms for correcting mistakes.

The idea is that when citizens and institutions can share and challenge information, society becomes more capable of identifying sound policies.

Intellectual Roots

Epistemic democracy draws on several traditions:

  • John Stuart Mill — truth emerges through open discussion.
  • John Dewey — democracy as collective inquiry.
  • Jürgen Habermas — legitimacy through rational deliberation.
  • Karl Popper — knowledge advances through criticism and falsification.
  • Condorcet — under certain conditions, groups can outperform individuals.

Distinction from Related Terms

  • Democracy emphasizes equal participation.
  • Technocracy emphasizes expert rule.
  • Epistocracy gives more power to the knowledgeable.
  • Epistemic democracy keeps democratic equality but argues that democracy is justified partly because it can generate reliable knowledge.

Why It Fits Your Idea

Your question focuses on the notion that society should be organized around the effective circulation of knowledge. Epistemic democracy captures exactly that intuition:

  • Knowledge is socially produced.
  • Institutions should facilitate its circulation.
  • Collective decisions should improve as knowledge improves.
  • Political legitimacy depends in part on truth-tracking performance.

A Concise Definition

Epistemic democracy is the theory that democratic institutions are valuable because they enable societies to generate, test, circulate, and apply knowledge in pursuit of better collective decisions.

Related Concepts Worth Exploring

  • Social epistemology
  • Collective intelligence
  • Learning society
  • Knowledge commons

 There is no single universally accepted doctrine that says the circulation of knowledge should be the central organizing principle of society, but several well-established concepts come very close.

Closest Existing Concepts

Knowledge society

This is probably the closest mainstream term. It is widely used in policy, education, and economics to describe societies that prioritize learning, research, and information exchange.

Learning society

Popularized by thinkers such as Peter Senge and later by economists like Joseph Stiglitz. The idea is that institutions should be designed to maximize society’s capacity to learn.

Epistemic democracy

This approach treats the production and circulation of reliable knowledge as essential to legitimate government.

Open society

Associated with Karl Popper. In an open society, institutions are structured to allow ideas to be tested and corrected.

Noocracy

A more philosophical term for rule guided by collective intelligence and wisdom.

Related Normative Ideas

  • Scientific temper
  • Knowledge commons
  • Deliberative democracy

If You Want a Succinct Principle

You could state the idea as:

“A society should be organized to maximize the creation, circulation, and application of reliable and apposite knowledge.”

That principle aligns most closely with the concepts of knowledge society, learning society, and epistemic democracy.

Best Term Depending on Your Intent

  • Policy and social development: Knowledge society
  • Education and institutional design: Learning society
  • Political philosophy: Epistemic democracy
  • Philosophical or visionary framing: Noocracy
  • Freedom of inquiry and criticism: Open society

My Recommendation

If you want the most broadly recognized and neutral term, use knowledge society.

If you want to emphasize that institutions should be judged by how well they generate and circulate truth, epistemic democracy is the most precise philosophical concept.

Monday, 18 May 2026

"The worst human cruelty does more than injure the body; it systematically attacks the mind and spirit, leaving a person alive to endure suffering that feels endless. Most humans are more evil than any animal on earth because even the cruellest animal on earth may destroy your body once but humans destroys your soul daily and still keep you barely alive to bear the infinite suffering."

"I see “enlightenment” and “arahantship” as highly idealized goals that a tradition built up over time, not as psychological states we’ve actually been able to demonstrate. When people keep saying “the Buddha said…”, it basically serves to pin those ideals onto one uniquely authoritative person, instead of admitting they were shaped by communities over centuries. From an Ernest Becker perspective, this kind of insistence also functions as an existential defense: it preserves a heroic narrative and a uniquely reliable guide in the face of mortality and meaninglessness, making it harder to acknowledge the more modest, human origins of these ideas. A much less ambitious—or heroic—and more historically grounded aim, and one that both history and modern psychology can support, is simply to live with fewer materialistic ambitions and to stay consciously aware of change, death, and the larger, not‑fully‑graspable character of existence—for example through experiences of awe or honest existential reflection on one’s life—because those shifts in values and perspective tend, on average, to be associated with better mental health and a greater sense of meaning. But giving up the “Buddha said” and enlightenment myths does not free us from the need for such meaning‑systems; it usually means that our heroic strivings reattach to other narratives—artistic achievement, national or ideological causes, romantic destiny, even the pride of being a rational, secular critic. The difficult question, then, is not whether to live entirely without illusions, but which necessary illusions we choose to inhabit or to half‑consciously suspend disbelief in—and it may turn out that, for some people at least, the relatively nonviolent, introspective myths of “the Buddha” and “enlightenment” are a more benign suspension of disbelief than many of the alternatives on offer".

JS

Depression is often defined partly in terms of anhedonia because psychiatry has historically focused on observable symptoms and impairments...