What Is the Meaning of Life? What Philosophy Actually Says

Most people ask “What is the meaning of life?” like there’s a hidden answer waiting somewhere. Philosophy has bad news: there probably isn’t one. At least not the kind you’re looking for. No cosmic purpose written into the universe. No instruction manual. No predetermined reason you exist. This sounds depressing. It’s actually liberating. Think about it this way. If life had one true meaning — handed down by God or built into nature — you’d have no choice about it....

April 18, 2026 · 1 min · The Pleasure Principle

What Is the Trolley Problem? The Thought Experiment That Reveals Your Moral Wiring

A runaway trolley speeds toward five people tied to the tracks. You can pull a lever to divert it onto a side track, where it will kill one person instead of five. Do you pull the lever? Most people say yes. Save five lives by sacrificing one. The math seems obvious. But here’s the twist. Same setup, except this time you’re on a bridge above the tracks with a large stranger....

April 17, 2026 · 2 min · The Pleasure Principle

What Is Nihilism? Why It's Not as Scary as You Think

Nihilism gets a bad reputation. People hear “life has no meaning” and picture someone in a black hoodie saying nothing matters while staring at the void. That’s not what nihilism actually claims. Nihilism says life has no inherent meaning. No cosmic purpose handed down from above. No predetermined plan you’re supposed to follow. The universe didn’t create you for a reason. But nihilists don’t stop there. Most of them ask: so what now?...

April 16, 2026 · 2 min · The Pleasure Principle

What Is Existentialism? A Simple Guide to the Philosophy of Freedom

Existentialism says you exist first, then you decide what you are. Most philosophies work backward. They start with human nature, then tell you how to live. “Humans are rational, so be rational.” “Humans have souls, so save your soul.” Existentialists flip this. You’re born without a preset nature or purpose. No cosmic plan. No essential self to discover. Just raw existence. This sounds terrifying. It’s meant to. Sartre called it “being condemned to be free....

April 15, 2026 · 2 min · The Pleasure Principle

What Is Hedonism? The Philosophy Most People Get Wrong

Most people hear “hedonism” and think of someone doing shots at 2 AM or buying things they can’t afford. That’s not hedonism. That’s just poor impulse control. Real hedonism is a philosophy. It says pleasure is the only thing that’s good for its own sake. Pain is bad. Everything else—money, fame, virtue—only matters if it leads to pleasure or prevents pain. This sounds obvious until you watch people chase things that make them miserable....

April 14, 2026 · 2 min · The Pleasure Principle

What Is Stoicism? A Beginner's Guide to the Philosophy That Won't Die

Stoicism gets a bad rap. People think it means being emotionless. A robot. It doesn’t. The Stoics had a simple insight: most of your suffering comes from wanting to control things you can’t control. Your boss is unreasonable. Traffic is terrible. Your team lost. Someone said something cruel about you online. None of that is up to you. What is up to you? How you respond. What you do next. Where you put your attention....

April 13, 2026 · 2 min · The Pleasure Principle

In Defense of Wanting Things

We’ve made wanting things into a moral failing. Want a nicer car? You’re materialistic. Want recognition at work? You’re vain. Want your ex back? You’re pathetic. Want to be rich? You’re shallow. But here’s what I notice: the people who shame desire the most still want things. They just want different things. The monk who’s renounced material possessions? He wants enlightenment. The minimalist who owns twelve items? She wants simplicity. The stoic who claims to be above it all?...

April 12, 2026 · 2 min · The Pleasure Principle

Why Some Pleasures Feel Guilty

We call some pleasures “guilty” and others virtuous. Eating cake versus eating kale. Watching reality TV versus reading books. Sleeping in versus getting up early. This distinction isn’t natural. Pleasure is pleasure. But calling some pleasures guilty serves a purpose. It creates social order. If everyone chased immediate physical pleasures all the time, society would fall apart. So we developed shame around certain kinds of enjoyment. We made indulgence feel wrong and discipline feel righteous....

April 11, 2026 · 2 min · The Pleasure Principle

The Guilt Tax on Happiness

I ate an expensive dinner last week while scrolling through news about famine. The pasta was perfect. I felt terrible about enjoying it. This guilt seems reasonable at first. People are suffering. I’m having fun. How can that be okay? But here’s the thing: my misery doesn’t reduce anyone else’s suffering. If I hate my pasta, no one gets fed. If I skip the dinner entirely and donate that money, maybe someone benefits....

April 10, 2026 · 2 min · The Pleasure Principle

Why Suffering Gets Credit for Building Character

We have a weird bias about what teaches us things. Suffering gets credit for building character. “What doesn’t kill you makes you stronger.” “Pain is weakness leaving the body.” We treat hardship like a stern but wise teacher. Pleasure gets no such respect. Nobody says “That vacation really built my character” or “All that happiness made me a better person.” We act like pleasure is just pleasure. Nice while it lasts, but shallow....

April 9, 2026 · 2 min · The Pleasure Principle