36 research outputs found

    Gardens of happiness: Sir William Temple, temperance and China

    Get PDF
    This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor & Francis via the DOI in this recordSir William Temple, an English statesman and humanist, wrote ā€œUpon the Gardens of Epicurusā€ in 1685, taking a neo-epicurean approach to happiness and temperance. In accord with Pierre Gassendiā€™s epicureanism, ā€œhappinessā€ is characterised as freedom from disturbance and pain in mind and body, whereas ā€œtemperanceā€ means following nature (Providence and oneā€™s physiopsychological constitution). For Temple, cultivating fruit trees in his garden was analogous to the threefold cultivation of temperance as a virtue in the humoral body (as food), the mind (as freedom from the passions), and the bodyeconomic (as circulating goods) in order to attain happiness. A regimen that was supposed to cure the malaise of Restoration amidst a crisis of unbridled passions, this threefold cultivation of temperance underlines Templeā€™s reception of China and Confucianism wherein happiness and temperance are highlighted. Thus Templeā€™s ā€œgardens of happinessā€ represent not only a reinterpretation of classical ideas, but also his dialogue with China.European CommissionLeverhulme Trus

    Evaluation of the platinum chain in the treatment of lagophthalmos

    No full text

    Anisotropic multilinear forms

    No full text
    corecore