VCE Philosophy Unit 3, Area of Study 1 organises the good life around four central questions. Philosophers in the set texts offer competing viewpoints on each. Understanding these viewpoints — their premises, conclusions, and assumptions — is the backbone of exam preparation.
Epicurus argued that pleasure (hedone) is the highest good and the goal of life — but he distinguished kinetic pleasures (active enjoyment) from katastematic pleasures (the calm state of being free from pain and anxiety, ataraxia). True pleasure requires self-discipline: overindulgence produces more pain than pleasure in the long run.
J.S. Mill refined hedonism by ranking pleasures: higher pleasures (intellectual, aesthetic) are superior to lower pleasures (bodily). His famous claim: “Better to be Socrates dissatisfied than a fool satisfied.”
Epictetus held that external pleasures are beyond our control (not “up to us”). Genuine happiness comes from virtue and mastering our responses to external events. Self-discipline (askesis) is not merely useful — it is partly constitutive of the good life.
Aristotle argued pleasure accompanies the excellent exercise of our faculties but is not the goal. The truly virtuous person takes pleasure in virtuous action. Pleasure without virtue is hollow; virtue generates appropriate pleasure.
VCAA FOCUS: Be ready to compare Epicurus and Aristotle on pleasure — they agree pleasure matters but disagree on whether it is the ultimate good or a by-product of virtue.
Happiness (eudaimonia) is not a feeling but an activity — the active exercise of the soul’s faculties in accordance with virtue. It is:
- Intrinsically valuable (desired for its own sake, not as a means)
- Complete (a whole life well-lived, not a single moment)
- Self-sufficient (needing nothing further to be worthwhile)
Mill defines happiness as pleasure and the absence of pain. The greatest happiness of the greatest number is the supreme moral principle (the Principle of Utility).
Nozick’s experience machine thought experiment challenges hedonism: if we could plug into a machine that gave us only pleasurable experiences, most of us would refuse — suggesting we value real achievement and relationships, not just the subjective feel of happiness.
Aristotle distinguishes three types:
| Type | Basis | Durability |
|—|—|—|
| Utility friendships | Mutual benefit | Ends when benefit does |
| Pleasure friendships | Enjoyment | Ends when enjoyment does |
| Virtue friendships | Admiring each other’s character | Most durable; only complete form |
Virtue friendship is central to eudaimonia: humans are political and social animals; we cannot flourish in isolation. A good friend functions as a “second self” — reflecting our virtues back to us.
Some contemporary philosophers (e.g., Carol Gilligan, Nel Noddings) argue that care relationships — not just virtuous friendships — are constitutive of the good life, highlighting the role of empathy, responsiveness, and particular attachments.
Sartre: “Existence precedes essence” — we have no fixed human nature; we define ourselves through our choices. Authentic living means acknowledging our radical freedom and taking full responsibility for who we become. Bad faith (mauvaise foi) is the self-deception of pretending we are determined by our circumstances.
Simone de Beauvoir argued that genuine freedom is relational: your freedom is compromised if others’ freedom is oppressed. The good life requires both personal authenticity and working to ensure others can also be free.
Alasdair MacIntyre and others argue that Sartre overstates our freedom: we are embedded in traditions and communities that partly constitute who we are. Authenticity built on a fiction of rootless freedom may be self-undermining.
| Question | Key Thinker | Core Claim |
|---|---|---|
| Pleasure & self-discipline | Epicurus, Aristotle | Pleasure matters but requires wisdom/virtue to be genuine |
| Nature of happiness | Aristotle, Mill | Eudaimonia (activity) vs. hedonic pleasure |
| Love and friendship | Aristotle | Virtue friendship is necessary for flourishing |
| Freedom & authenticity | Sartre, de Beauvoir | Authentic self-creation; freedom is both gift and responsibility |
EXAM TIP: For each question, know at least two competing viewpoints and be ready to construct a genuine comparison — identifying what the thinkers agree and disagree on at the level of premises, not just conclusions.
COMMON MISTAKE: Students often describe viewpoints rather than analysing them. To analyse, you must identify the premises of the argument and ask whether the conclusion follows from those premises.