Richard
Klein is a professor of French literature at Cornell University.
This essay is adapted from his chapter in the collection of
essays entitled Against Health: How Health Became the New
Morality.
In
the United States, health has become a commodity and an industry.
We spend vastly more than any other country on health care,
and increasingly our health is our wealth. Even in our down
economy, health-care spending continues to grow. In 2006, Americans
spent about $35-billion on diets and diet services, in large
part under the illusion that they were improving their health.
Yet we consistently fall behind Britain, not to mention France,
in every measure of public health. Some place American public
health just ahead of that of Slovenia.
We
may be nearing a point where institutions of public health and
the commercial interests that surround it, including the media,
do more harm than good to the nation's health. The official
version of health peddled by our current system is not only
venal but potentially noxious. In some instances, public health
has been transformed into a kind of iatric disease, a medically
induced assault on the health of society. Our minders trumpet
the obesity epidemic even as epidemiological evidence suggests
that ‘yo-yo dieting’ (repeatedly losing and regaining
weight over a period of several years) actively damages the
immune system. At any given time, it is estimated that 50 percent
of all women are on diets, and 95 percent of all diets fail.
The more we diet, the fatter we seem to become.
To
be ‘against health’ is to utter a paradox, a sort
of oxymoron in the Greek sense, from oxus, meaning
‘sharp,’ and moros, meaning ‘stupid.’
To be against health is to utter a sharp stupidity because,
almost by definition, we cannot be against health. The very
concept of health implies a positive value that one cannot but
choose, as when Socrates argues that one can choose only the
good. What is bad may be chosen only when it is a better evil,
as in cutting off your arm to save your life. Indeed, how can
the value of health be demeaned when Aristotle makes it the
entelechy, the very aim of all medicine? If to be against
health is therefore stupid, or moros, it is also oxus,
shrewd and terribly sharp. If we cannot logically be against
it, we must be against certain uses and misuses of the word
‘health.’
To
be against health is to be critical of the myths and lies concerning
our health that are circulated by the media and paid for by
large industries. It is to demystify their hidden moralizing
and their political agenda. It also means expanding the idea
of iatric disease to include the moral and physical harm that
is done to the public by particular nostrums of public health,
especially those that impose constraints and privations "for
your own good," as the saying goes.
To
be against health also means putting forth a different idea
of health. My alternative approach takes its cue from a long
line of Epicurean philosophers, beginning with the fourth-century-BC
philosopher who founded his ‘Garden’ in Athens,
close by the Platonic Academy. The Garden of Epicurus has inspired
many adherents to its teachings, including the poet Horace in
Roman times and later Pierre Gassendi, François Bernier,
Ninon de l'Enclos, Denis Diderot, Jeremy Bentham, and Friedrich
Nietzsche. Thomas Jefferson referred to himself as an Epicurean.
You
may not have heard of Ninon de l'Enclos. One of the greatest
courtesans in the court of Louis XIII, she slept with royals
and the most desirable men in the realm, conducted the most
brilliant salon, and wrote the wittiest philosophical letters
ever to speak about the nature of love. She was a great reader
of Epicurus and his disciple Montaigne. In the eighth of her
Letters to the Marquis de Sévigné, de
l'Enclos writes:
According
to de l'Enclos, if a life in the best of vigorous health is
without love, it is no life at all, only a long illness. Even
health is illness without love; conversely, there is no illness
that love cannot cure or make tolerable. At the same time, love
is trouble. Like wind, it troubles the surface of the sea, but
it also makes navigation possible. The agitation of love preserves
the self, keeps it healthy even when—especially when—it
is sick. The risk of love, which so often ends in shipwreck,
is what keeps a person healthy.
But
there are other classic paths to health. Socrates believed in
dancing every morning. We could do more for public health if
the government spent a fraction of what it spends curbing smoking
on promoting dancing. An Epicurean approach asks not what temptations
need to be avoided in the name of health. Instead it asks, "What
is health, and how do you get it?" Imagine a world in which
public policy declared that pleasure is the principal means
to health.
The
very idea of pleasure, if one can speak of it in the singular
and not the plural (is there something all pleasures have in
common?), comprises the most diverse and even contradictory
notions. Of these, the most clearly contradictory is the paradox
of what Burke or Kant or Freud calls "negative pleasure,"
which is understood to underlie forms of masochism and the experience
of the sublime. In Kant's Critique of Judgment, the
sublime always entails a negative moment of shock or fearful
awe as one component of its greater good feeling, its aesthetic
pleasure. Leaving aside these antinomies, can we agree to call
pleasure both the slow, economic accumulation of delicious tension
and its abrupt and self-vacating explosion of release? This
is the distinction the French make between plaisir
and jouissance, between two different types of pleasure.
Bartolomeo
Platina, the great 15th-century scholar, papal librarian, and
Epicurean, wrote De honesta voluptate et valetudine
(On Honest Pleasure and Good Health) while imprisoned
in the castle San Angelo in Rome, where a vengeful Pope Paul
II had thrown him. Platina starts from the classical Epicurean
premise that pleasure is not only a positive value but the highest
value, and that health is its necessary supplement. A person
cannot be sick and still feel good. She cannot be depressed,
or physically debauched from alcohol and drugs, say, and still
have pleasurable feelings. Following Platina and his master
Epicurus, however, the corollary is also true. Not only is health
the sine qua non of pleasure (that without which there
is none), but pleasure improves your health. Put another way,
if you inhibit the body's pleasure, you provoke disease.
Over
the gates to his garden (it was not a school), Epicurus inscribed
the hedonist creed: "Stranger, here you will do well to
tarry; here our highest good is pleasure." With an eye
to what was fitting and measured and moderate, Epicurus indulged
his senses. After all, he believed that excessive pleasure,
like stoic privation, ruins one's health and weakens the will.
Thomas Jefferson, himself a hedonist, agreed. In 1819 he wrote
to William Short, saying that "the doctrine of Epicurus
. . . is the most rational system remaining of the philosophy
of the ancients, as frugal of vicious indulgence and fruitful
of virtue as the hyperbolical extravagances of his rival sects."
In
our time, it has become un-American to be Epicurean, to consider
pleasure, even moderately indulged, to be the highest good.
An old strain of American Puritanism to which Jefferson was
immune, if not allergic, has become the new morality. Dressing
itself up in the language of public health, this new morality
views the least indulgence in adult pleasure as the sign of
a nascent habit on the way to becoming a dangerous compulsion.
In a sense, of course, that is precisely what distinguishes
adult pleasures from childish ones: Adult pleasures can quickly
become habitual. But without risk, there is no adult pleasure,
and risk is what keeps us alive, not just living on. Perhaps
that is why every single person I know has been addicted—habituated
to something—at some time in life and has had a problem
dealing with it. It is an all but inevitable consequence of
the pleasures we seek, particularly in America, where we are
publicly spurred on to consume by advertisements and stresses
that excite desire. It is not all bad. Nietzsche says that nothing
in life is better than our habits, as long as they don't perdure.
"I love brief habits," he writes, "and consider
them an inestimable means for getting to know many things and
states, down to the bottom of their sweetness and bitternesses."
Each
of us would like to know how to draw the fine line between the
moderation Epicurus practiced and the intemperance he deplored.
In On Honest Pleasure and Good Health, Platina writes,
"Not all foods suit all people . . . To my mind, no one
eats what fills him with distaste, or harms, or pains, or kills."
Platina is referring specifically to eating, but his suggestion
can be taken more generally: We each consume what our body or
spirit craves. You may require only one drink a day to ease
your arteries, whereas I may need two or three. But when I start
to need three or four a day, I'm probably getting into trouble.
And if it isn't martinis at lunch that get me in trouble, it
could be the cigarettes I sneak in the garage, or the poker
game I lose twice a week, or the attractive babysitter, altar
boys, or the alluring Congressional page. (What makes babysitters
so irresistibly attractive, I have often thought, is their being
simultaneously nubile children and caring mothers; the same
may be true of Congressional pages—and altar boys). It
belongs to the very nature of adult pleasure that it has the
potential for getting out of hand. If it did not entail the
risk of being immoderate, the pleasure it procures would lose
its intensity.
For
many people, a life without the oil of drink becomes too much
to bear. A little wine eases the vague and subcutaneous unease
that stress puts on our muscles; a martini induces a moment
of forgetfulness when the anxieties and fears of the day recede.
In pursuit of happiness, Americans are insistently encouraged
to consume vast quantities of anti-anxiety drugs and antidepressants,
but booze is never publicly celebrated. Rarely do we hear about
the charms and benefits of alcohol, or the sociability it has
promoted from the dawn of time, or the pleasure and consolation
it has infused into the lives of billions over the course of
human history.
Even
when epidemiology is not manipulated to serve special interests,
it tells the truth of an aggregate. By definition, epidemiology
says nothing about a particular person's mortal destiny or the
health that accompanies it. An Epicurean view of health focuses
not on what makes us identical to the scientists' cohort, but
what makes each of us irreducible singularities. Each one of
us is a throw of the genetic and historical dice, born into
this world with peculiar strengths and weaknesses, and with
the singular obligation to take responsibility for our individual
health. In short, health for the Epicurean is more a matter
of art than of science, more an aesthetic than a biological
question. Each of us has to find his or her own road to health.
This takes cunning and, these days, some scientific curiosity.
For
an Epicurean, the first curiosity is about our body—how
it works, how it responds to pleasure and pain. In The Physiology
of Taste, the 19th-century Epicurean Jean Anthelme Brillat-Savarin
writes: "When we eat, we receive a certain indefinable
and peculiar impression of happiness originating in instinctive
consciousness. When we eat, too, we repair our losses and prolong
our lives." Pleasure may thus be a form of intelligence,
an intuitive science as well as an art. Some nations have more
of this intelligence than others. As M.F.K. Fisher writes in
The Art of Eating, "France eats more consciously,
more intelligently than any other nation." There are serious
scientists who believe in the French paradox, that the gourmand's
steady diet of foie gras and good red wine protects him from
risk of heart disease. Michel Montignac, the French Dr. Atkins,
believes in the healthful, slimming virtues of protein and fat
but also recommends the purifying and invigorating powers of
wine.
Whenever
anyone asked Julia Child to name her guilty pleasures, she responded,
"I don't have any guilt." Epicureanism not only absolves
us of guilt but says that our guilty pleasures might actually
be keeping us healthy—mentally, physically, or both. Like
Proust, the doctor's son, we might even consider it perversely
healthy to sacrifice our health in order to write the greatest
novel of the century. Julia Child was vigorous into her 90s
not despite slathering chickens with butter, but because of
it. Only you can judge, however, what your body needs and what
gives you pleasure. It may be vital to know that cigarettes
are bad for your health, but you might at the same time feel,
like Sartre, that life without cigarettes is not worth living.
In
America, we have become strangely divorced from our bodies,
counting calories on every product in the supermarket, watching
blood pressure, measuring cholesterol and sacrificing pleasure
out of an excess of caution. These days we eat not for pleasure,
but to lower our numbers. Yet we are one of the fattest nations
in the world and growing every day more obese. But what do we
stand to lose if we lose the enjoyment and pleasure that we
derive from good eating and drinking? We may stand to lose everything.
The epidemiologist cannot tell us what the Epicurean wants to
know: What should I choose to love without guilt? What is good
for me? What keeps me happy? What, in the best sense, keeps
me healthy?
In
certain European philosophical circles, there has been a recent
spike of interest in Epicurus, and not only among Marxists (Marx
wrote his doctoral thesis on Epicurus). Like every Greek, Epicurus
was obliged to believe in the pantheon of Greek gods who lived
on Mount Olympus; but he did so without having to suppose that
these gods were even remotely interested in human affairs. As
a result, Epicurus needed to find principles for living that
were based not on theological but on materialist (or, we might
say, scientific) conceptions of the world—those which
explained all nature, including mind and spirit, with reference
not to the supernatural but to harmonies and atomic processes.
Marx
studied Epicurus because the Greek philosopher was the great
ancient popularizer of the earlier materialist philosophers
Leucippus and Democritus, who, in the fourth and fifth centuries
BC, were the first to propound an atomistic doctrine. Epicurus
in turn directly influenced the Roman Lucretius, whose De
rerum natura became the authority for Renaissance materialism
and the basis of the whole philosophical tradition that runs
from Bacon to Locke to Hume and Hobbes and all the way to Feuerbach,
who thought that "you are what you eat."
Neo-Epicureans
argue that the entire philosophical tradition since Plato—perhaps
philosophy itself—has always rejected materialism and
has forever been in love with idealism. Even the so-called materialist
philosophies exhibit forms of Platonic idealism; this idealism
may be turned on its head, as it were, but its articulations
are still in place. The new, radical Epicureanism, on the other
hand, is nonphilosophical. It is a new way of articulating the
relation between theory and practice; it is a praxis of thinking
about pleasure and its value, in and of itself, as well as from
the standpoint of health. Like Nietzsche, the Epicurean does
not aspire to negate philosophy, for that would be only another
way of affirming it. Philosophy is nothing but the history of
its successive negations. Rather, Epicurus teaches us how to
look away from the tradition. "Looking up and away shall
be my only negation," Nietzsche asserts in The Gay
Science. Like Nietzsche, neo-Epicureans start their thinking
not with ideas but with what Epicurus insists is the origin
of thought, the body.
Broadly
put, neo-Epicureans suppose not only that you are what you eat,
but that you think what you eat. Take German idealism, says
Nietzsche. It has the leaden consistency and gaseous redolence
of a diet thick with potatoes. Italian thought, one might add,
is marked by the slippery texture and doughy blandness of pasta.
Jewish metaphysics has the astringency and smoky intensity of
briny pickles and cured fish. The indistinctness of Buddhist
thought resembles white rice. Neo-Epicureans aim to discover
not just a philosophy of being but a hygiene for living; not
a universal system but a way of thinking about good health in
terms of the peculiar proclivities of the individual body.
In
the historical debate between mind and matter, mind won and
silenced the voice of the body; it interpreted the body in terms
of mind and considered it a mute machine that only reason could
discover. It is time to recover that corporeal voice, to recast
the Epicurean thinking that puts pleasure in the place of thought,
that imagines bodily pleasure to be a kind of thinking. Good
health will then be understood as a consequence of good pleasure,
and adult pleasure will be prized, not tabooed; moderated, not
censored; indulged, not feared.
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