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The Secret Of Happiness: Three thousand years of searching for the good life
 
 
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The Secret Of Happiness: Three thousand years of searching for the good life [Hardcover]

Richard Schoch , Scribner
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Profile Books (23 Mar 2006)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1861979096
  • ISBN-13: 978-1861979094
  • Product Dimensions: 21.8 x 13.8 x 3 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 836,147 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Richard W. Schoch
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Product Description

Review

'Deeply considered and immensely well informed ... this book compels us to think afresh about who we are and how we behave' -- Professor Stanley Wells 'Schoch's hugely enjoyable book is a slap in the face to the self-help industry, a kick up the rear to the "new science of happiness", and a challenge to we atheists who believe religion has nothing useful to contribute to the quest for happiness.' -- Julian Baggini

Product Description

A stylish, witty book about happiness that explains with authority what happiness actually is and why understanding its history can help us to live happier lives. What connects a Greek philosopher with a cult following of prostitutes, a Roman civil servant who was unjustly executed, and a Persian scholar who traded books for mystic ecstasy? This trio - Epicurus (341-271 BC), Boethius (c. 480-524 AD) and Abu Hamid Al-Ghazali (1058-1111) - allowed their reflections about happiness to give meaning to their lives, and through such individuals and their ideas we can reclaim the lost art of happiness. Today, influenced by books on the "new science" of happiness and quick "self-help" panaceas, we have settled for a much weaker version of happiness than previous cultures: just enjoyment of pleasure and avoidance of pain and suffering. It is only through rediscovering the traditions that began in the West with the philosophers of Athens and in the East with anonymous Hindu sages that we can learn how to be genuinely happy again. During the journey through ideas philosophical and religious, from around the world and across thousands of years, Professor Schoch answers questions that are fundamental to our wellbeing but are rarely asked. What does it feel like to be happy, and can you be happy if others are unhappy? Is happiness an emotion, or an attitude? How much effort do you have to make to be happy, and do you have a right to be happy? The good life is easier to grasp when you know the answers.

Inside This Book (Learn More)
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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Customer Reviews

3 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.7 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

28 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Happiness is a glowing review, 2 May 2006
By 
Paul Brollo - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Secret Of Happiness: Three thousand years of searching for the good life (Hardcover)
Richard Schoch's remarkable book claims to reveal the historical secrets of happiness and does just that, although the messages are challenging ones to hear and accept. Amidst all the beautiful and learned anecdotes in the book, Mr Schoch seems to makes at least three essential points about the nature of happiness.

The first of these points seems to be that happiness is only one half of a binary experience. More simply, the people who seek the experience we call "happiness" usually do so only because they are having the experience we call "unhappiness". In other words, the people who have found happiness have started on their search as a result of misfortune; usually personal and typically deep enough to drive these people to find change either inside or outside themselves. Just as we cannot know the meaning of day without night, we cannot know the meaning of happiness without despair.

The second point is that historically the people who have found happiness have done so only through enormous effort and personal sacrifice. These people have dedicated their lives to finding the meaning of happiness and have earned the right to be happy only through self-confrontation and self-knowledge. In fact, Mr Schoch refers to the experience of happiness as our "life's project", one which we move in and out of on a regular basis rather than one which we experience as a constant.

The third point is that the experience of happiness is different for each person. According to the examples Mr Schoch gives, everyone who has found happiness has done so on his or her own terms. As a non-believer in the cult of happiness, this point is where all arguments about the nature of happiness begin to fail for me. If happiness is relative and subjective, then the only measurement of happiness I have is my memory of my previous experience and my current self-knowledge, both of which are intangible and unreliable.

Despite the fact that the existence of happiness is as much a matter of belief for me as the existence of god, Mr Schoch's arguments make for thought-provoking reading. The book covers several schools of classical thought as well as the five major world religions, providing a fascinating overview of the history of thinking about happiness.

Ironically, what emerges for me from this overview is that our preoccupation with despair and happiness seems to be a result of living together in an organised way. Civilisation seems to have made us aware enough of "unhappiness" to make us want to look for alternative states of being. At the same time, civilisation has given us enough leisure time to occupy ourselves with this dubious pursuit.

Mr Schoch's book seems to make two fundamental assumptions. The first of these is that "happiness" exists. The second is that "happiness" is something we can obtain, although the author does point out that happiness usually emerges from other activities, such as self-mastery. Despite the fact that I accept neither of these assumptions, Mr Schoch's clear arguments allowed me to clarify my own interpretation of the meaning of well-being.

Clearly, the author believes in happiness; and clearly, he believes that the pursuit of happiness is a worthy one. In fact, the careful objectivity of the writing barely manages to disguise Mr Schoch's passion for his subject and his deep drive to take the historical secrets of happiness to his readers.

Without doubt, sharing the secrets of happiness with the rest of us makes Mr Schoch very happy indeed. The result is a beautiful book, one which offers the rare satisfaction of reading a knowledgeable, well-presented argument. The message that we are responsible for our own happiness might seem austere. However, the writer has balanced that austerity with an extraordinary ability to empathise with other people's perspectives on the meaning of happiness.

I agree with almost nothing in Mr Schoch's controversial book; nevertheless, reading his work was an enormous pleasure. As a result, I cannot help feeling that in terms of the author's own happiness-versus-pleasure debate, pleasure seems to have won hands down.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Happy!, 6 Sep 2010
By 
M. A. Eales (Northampton, UK) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Secret Of Happiness: Three thousand years of searching for the good life (Hardcover)
All in all the book is good... i rather enjoyed it. Given the fact that i am a Father of two who juggles childcare and work rather precariously, i appreciate authours who take a holistic approach to a subject (in this case Happiness) and make it easily accessible.

I am sure, as the children get older and i find myself with time once more, to do what i will, i may pick up Plato's 'Republic,' i may indeed Read the Veda's, and other notable religious doctrine or philosophical works - Aristotle, Marcus Aurelius, Gurdjieff to name but a few will guide me to understanding, but that will take time, patience and dedication.

For now i shall read the likes of Schochs, in the hope i will carry a smile from time to time, until the day when I call upon the collective wisdoms of humankind to enrich me with everlasting happiness.

Schoch may not come close to enlightening anyone, but for those like me, who have little time left between work, family duty and everything else in between, Schoch is a comforting reminder of the knowledge and truths that await us...
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0 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars A bit of a Schoch, 18 May 2009
By 
This review is from: The Secret Of Happiness: Three thousand years of searching for the good life (Hardcover)
I really should have found something out about this author before I bought the book, but it was one of those spur of the moment buys. Richard Schoch is an academic, being professor of the history of culture at Queen Mary, University of London, where he is also director of the Graduate School in Humanities and Social Sciences. Apart from his academic life he has little experience of the world, the blurb of his profile says; that he managed development projects in Morocco and Tunisia; it does not say what those projects were or how long they lasted.
So here we have someone with little experience of life putting himself forward as a guru for happiness.
How does he make up for this lack of personal experience; quite simply by regurgitating a lot of text from old sources. There are brief guides to Utilitarianism, Stoicism, Epicureanism, and so on. There are likewise brief guides on religious philosophers Thomas Aquinas, Ghazali, Gautama etc. All of this is interspersed with some homespun wisdom, where the early influence of a Jesuit education shines through his text.
Quite honestly all the information contained in the book is easily found on Wikipedia.
Schoch may have received an indulgence from the Pope for his sins but I am afraid he gets a zero rating from me because he is someone who has yet to find out what life is really about.
Not worth buying, if you must read it borrow a copy.
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