E-Skeptic #43 for November 30, 2004
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Contents
Dr.
Edward Tufte to speak on Beautiful Evidence
Review of Facing Death:
Epicurus and His Critics
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Dr. Edward Tufte
Beautiful Evidence The Art of Science and the Science of Art
The renowned theorist of analytical
design, Edward Tufte, was described by the New York Times as “the Leonardo
da Vinci of data” for his pioneering work in the display and analysis of
visual evidence. His lecture here draws from his forthcoming book,
Beautiful Evidence, which develops the fundamental theory of analytical
design and proposes methods for display for nearly every type of evidence
(time series, images, causal arrows, data tables, statistical graphics,
public presentations). He will also discuss his analysis (that appeared in
the final report of the Columbia Accident Investigation Review Board) of
the Boeing/NASA PowerPoint slides created while the space shuttle Columbia
was injured but still alive.
Edward Tufte has written seven books,
including Visual Explanations, Envisioning Information, The Visual Display
of Quantitative Information, and Data Analysis for Politics and Policy. He
writes, designs, and self-publishes his books on information design, which
have received more than 40 awards for content and design. He is Professor
Emeritus at Yale University, where he taught courses in statistical
evidence, information design, and interface design. His current work
includes digital video, sculpture, printmaking, and a new book Beautiful
Evidence.
Directions: Off the 210 freeway exit
Lake Ave., go south, left on Del Mar, right on Michigan, park in the
faculty parking lot, Baxter building is on the southeastern end of the
parking lot. The lecture hall is on the second floor.
When Death Comes
Knockin’, Who Ya Gonna Call?
By David Voron
A Review of
Facing Death: Epicurus and His Critics
by James Warren, 2004, New York: Oxford University
Press, 240 pp.
We skeptics must face death without the
consolation of a religious person’s belief in an afterlife. When our heart
stops beating and our neurons stop firing, there will be no pearly gates
waiting for us. We have no image of a transcendent suprahuman being to
provide us with solace as the end approaches. So, when Death comes knockin’,
who ya gonna call? Epicurus, the death-buster, that’s who! says James
Warren, author of Facing Death: Epicurus and His Critics.
Epicurus (341-270 B.C.) is the founder
of Epicureanism, one of the schools of thought, along with Stoicism and
Skepticism, that dominated philosophy during the Hellenistic Period—the
three centuries beginning with the death of Alexander the Great in 323
B.C. and ending, by convention, with the victory of Octavian over Mark
Antony in 31 B.C. Today, “epicurean” means enjoying sensual pleasures and
possessing sensitive and discriminating tastes. However, Epicurus himself,
and Hellenistic Epicureanism in general, advocated the pursuit of simple
pleasures such as friendship and aesthetic contemplation. In his Letter to
Menoeceus, Epicurus writes:
For it is not continuous drinking and
revels, nor the enjoyment of women and young boys, nor of fish and other
viands, that a luxurious table holds, which make for a pleasant life,
but sober reasoning, which examines the motives for every choice and
avoidance, and which drives away those opinions resulting in the
greatest disturbance to the soul.
Among “those opinions resulting in the
greatest disturbance to the soul,” according to Epicurus, were religious
beliefs and the fear of death. Epicurus disputed the foundations of
popular Greek religion, which he recognized as the source of the fear of
divine judgment and eternal punishment. Warren quotes Epicurus’
Tetrapharmakos, his fourfold remedy for these disturbances of the soul:
God should not concern us.
Death is not to be feared.
What is good is easy to obtain.
What is bad is easily avoided.
That “death is not to be feared”
asserts Epicurus, can be demonstrated by rational argument. The simple
summation of Epicurus’ thesis is his well-known statement that “death is
nothing to us” because at the moment we die—the instant we cease to
exist—we experience nothing. As Warren says, “for something to be good or
bad for some person, that something . . . must be perceived by that
person.” Death is not perceived by the individual because the cessation of
life marks the cessation of all sensation, including that of physical and
mental pain. Death is merely the termination of a stream of consciousness.
It is unreasonable, says Epicurus, for us to be fearful of a future event
that will not harm us when it occurs. “What is no trouble when it arrives
is an idle worry in anticipation,” Epicurus explains in his Letter to
Menoeceus. Warren notes that Epicurus limits his thesis to the attitude he
believes it is reasonable for the individual to hold regarding his or her
own death, not to pain before death, or to the death of others.
Epicurus grants that it is not
irrational to fear the possibility of pain prior to death, or to the
experience of losing a loved one. However, if we have a dying friend or
family member who approaches death with an Epicurean perspective, some of
the pain of our own grief may be lifted. Additionally, says Epicurus, the
fact that “death is nothing to us,” does not prevent us from recollecting
with fondness pleasant memories of our loved ones. In fact, looking back
allows us to edit out past painful experiences by simply choosing not to
recall them.
Of course, our anxieties about death
reflect not just the fear of ceasing to exist, but also the awareness of
having something precious taken away from us, of being eternally deprived
of an existence that would have continued to yield pleasure. Epicurus’
response to this challenge is that ataraxia (the Hellenistic term for
tranquility or imperturbability), not duration, is the criterion of a life
well lived. Once ataraxia has been achieved, happiness cannot be
augmented, either by more accomplishments or by a longer life. This notion
may be difficult to accept for those who see life as a coherent narrative
with a beginning, middle, and end. According to this view, our lives have
a “plot,” which must be played out in order to be complete. The fear of
death significantly relies on this disposition to see one’s life as an
unfolding story.
For Epicurus, this narrative
structure—the way many people experience their being in time—is just an
arbitrary conceptual construction. The important questions are not “What
have I made of my life?” or “What will I make of my life?” but “How am I
right now?” It is the present-shaping consequences of the past and our
attitude to the future that matter, not the past and future as such. If I
am experiencing ataraxia, I am a perfected Epicurean, and logging in more
months or years, or attaining more goods or honors, is beside the point.
From this perspective, death deprives me of nothing and is nothing to be
feared. In the words of the Epicurean philosopher Philodemus:
The one who understands, having
grasped that he is capable of achieving everything sufficient for the
good life, immediately and for the rest of his life walks about already
ready for burial, and enjoys the single day as if it were eternity.
Warren notes that Philodemus’
observation is reminiscent of Wittgenstein’s affirmation that “he lives
eternally who lives in the present.” They also bring to mind Alan Watts’
conclusion that “life requires no future to complete itself, nor
explanation to justify itself. In this moment it is finished.”
As the subtitle suggests, Warren also
engages Epicurus’ critics. Perhaps the most effective argument potentially
undermining the Epicurean perspective is that it is at odds with our
visceral emotions. Warren concedes that logic may simply not be powerful
enough to overcome the fear of death. Reason must compete with other
intuitive, possibly innate, and unconscious sources of motivation. Warren
grants that, “it is possible to claim that the fear of death is a crucial
evolutionary product, ‘hard-wired,’ as it were, into our minds in order to
allow us to survive.” Of course, if death is in fact bound up in the
structure of our brains, we are stuck, and the Epicurean project is dead
in the water. However, as Warren puts it, “if it is possible to live a
human life without fearing death then fearing death is not essential to
being human.” Only our own subjective and attentive response to Epicurus’
philosophy can answer the question of whether the fear of death can be
overcome. Those of us who respond to Epicurus’ reasoning can say to him,
along with Diogenes of Oinoanda: “I agree with what you say about death,
and you have persuaded me to laugh in its face.”
Doubters of Diogenes will say he is
whistling in the dark, and that attempting to reason oneself out of the
fear of death is folly. They will say that our adult attitudes toward
death are too deeply embedded to be modified. But are they? If we
recognize that our view of death is molded during childhood and reinforced
over many years by the cultures into which we are born, we will see that
it is a constructed concept subject to rebuilding. As Warren says, “For
the Epicurean, learning to think about death correctly is an integral part
of living a good life.” Expecting Epicurus to convert us overnight to his
“death is nothing to us” perspective may be asking too much, but his
project is a worthy one. His reasoning, well explicated by Warren, is
sound, and his philosophy, if understood and applied, is literally life
changing. Epicureanism does have the potential to emancipate us from the
fear of death. Thus freed, we see life in a new light.

Author David A. Voron, M.D., has
been in the private practice of dermatology in Arcadia, California, since
1974. He is past president of the Los Angeles Metropolitan Dermatology
Society and currently a media spokesperson for the American Academy of
Dermatology. Dr. Voron is board certified in dermatology and
dermatopathology, and is a Clinical Professor Emeritus at the Keck USC
School of Medicine. He has been a reviewer for the Journal of the
American Academy of Dermatology and has authored fourteen medical
publications.