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    Gardens of happiness: Sir William Temple, temperance and China

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    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
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