
Everyone Has Epicurus Wrong
Almost everyone has Epicurus wrong. The word "epicurean" has come to mean indulgence, luxury, and fine dining, but the real philosophy of Epicurus is almost the opposite: a quiet life, simple food, trusted friends, and freedom from fear. Fall asleep to the complete philosophy of Epicurus. In this episode, we trace the full arc of Epicurus's life and ideas, beginning with a displaced young man on the island of Samos and ending with a philosophical vision that twenty-three centuries of persecution could not destroy. We explore his radical atomism, his argument that the gods do not care about human affairs, his claim that death is nothing to us, the most misunderstood concept in the history of philosophy (Epicurean pleasure as tranquility, ataraxia), the tetrapharmakos, the Garden as a community that admitted women and slaves as philosophical equals, and the miraculous survival of his ideas through Lucretius. We ask the question Epicurus leaves behind: what would it actually look like to live without fear? Please listen only in safe, restful contexts.





