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False pleasure : ウィキペディア英語版 | False pleasure False pleasure may be a pleasure based on a false belief (as of supposedly having come into money), or a pleasure deemed to be in some way ''false'', perhaps by comparison with truer, realler, or higher pleasures.〔Simon Blackburn, ''The Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy'' (2005) p. 130〕 Lacan maintained that philosophers should seek to "discern not true pleasures from false, for such a distinction is impossible to make, but the true and false goods that pleasure points to".〔Quoted in Y. Stavrakakis, ''Lacan and the Political'' (1999) p. 128〕 ==Classical philosophy==
Plato devoted much attention to the belief that "no pleasure save that of the wise is quite true and pure - all others are shadows only"〔Alain de Botton intro., ''The Essential Plato'' (1999) p. 364〕 - both in The Republic and in his late dialogue Philebus.〔Blackburn, p. 130〕 Augustine saw false pleasure as focused on the body, as well as pervading the dramatic and rhetorical entertainments of his time.〔B. Krondorfer, ''Male Confessions'' (2009) p. 83 and p. 140〕
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