Democracy gives us the right to
pursue happiness. It also gives us the
right to discuss what constitutes happiness.
The best way to celebrate our freedom is not merely to recite
Jefferson’s words but to challenge ourselves intellectually, to inquire into
the meaning of happiness. Jefferson himself reflected deeply on what
happiness means. Let’s follow his path
and see what he thought.
Contrary to the now popular view
that the founders of the United States were hyper-confident white males, filled
with prejudices, Jefferson’s reflections on happiness reveal that he was a
cosmopolitan observer. He was attuned
to the variety of cultures and the variety of approaches to happiness that one
can find in the world. Most of his
serious reflections on happiness come from the period when he lived in France,
in the 1780s. He was then struck by the
difference between European and American ways.
His thoughts on happiness are connected to his efforts to sort out what
Americans can learn from Europe, and what they should avoid.
In a letter he wrote on August
18, 1785, Jefferson commented on the sophisticated manners and refined
pleasures of elite society in Paris.
However, he noted that their “happiness” is not as “lasting” as that of
Americans. He then comments on the
breakdown of “domestic bonds” in Francemeaning that marital infidelity was
widespread. “All the passions are at
sea without rudder or compass.” He
observes that sexual affairs and other entertainments give French people a
release from the severity of their government; France was then an absolute
monarchy. But he finds that such joys are too discontinuous. They cannot compensate for the wretchedness
of living continuously under a bad government.
Happiness, then, is dependent on
liberty. People who live in absolutist
regimes become creative at inventing new varieties of pleasure. Their personalities may seem more complex
and supple than ours. But their
pleasures are perverse: they are always the flip-side of a basic lack of
dignity and choice.
Jefferson repeated the theme
that good government is a precondition of happiness in a letter of August 13,
1786. “If anybody thinks that kings,
nobles, or priests are good conservators of the public happiness, send him here
[France].” However, Jefferson also
emphasized that liberty alone is not happiness. Instead, happiness comes from exertion, or what he called
“industry.” The opposite of industry
is “indolence.” In a letter to his
daughter, dated March 28, 1787, Jefferson explained: “Of all the cankers of
human happiness none corrodes with so silent, yet so baneful a tooth, as
indolence. Body and mind both
unemployed, our being becomes a burden?No laborious person was ever yet
hysterical.” (The word “hysterical”
here means something like what we now call “depressed.”)
Jefferson goes on to highlight
the importance of physical exercise and intellectual focus. Young people should read difficult books and
study music. The aim is to learn to
entertain oneself. “In Europe there are
shops for every want: its inhabitants therefore have no idea that their wants
can be furnished otherwise. Remote from
all other aid, we are obliged to invent and to execute; to find means without
ourselves, and not to lean on others.”
So far, it looks like Jefferson
rejected European models of happiness.
But there is more. One of his
most profound pieces of writing is a letter he wrote to Maria Cosway, on
October 12, 1786. Cosway was a
beautiful Italian woman whom Jefferson met in Paris. This was after the death of Jefferson’s wife. Jefferson fell in love with Cosway, who was
married to a famous English painter.
His outpourings to her brought his thought to its highest emotional and
intellectual pitch. In the letter in
question, he contrived a dialogue between his “head” and his “heart” about the
meaning of happiness. The head, representing
practicality, says: “Everything in this world is a matter of calculation.” To get happiness, you just have to examine
every situation in terms of whether it produces more pleasure than pain. This is utilitarianism. It was becoming a popular philosophy in the British
Enlightenment, and it would go on to become a dominant conception of happiness
in America. It is the basis of most
analysis in the field of economics today.
Jefferson rejects it. The character of the “heart” represents his
viewpoint. Jefferson refuses to accept
that pain and pleasure are separable.
Here he draws on a different current of thought in Europe, the theory of
the “sublime.” A sublime experience is
one that mixes an unpleasant emotion, such as fear, with something positive,
such as revelation. On this basis,
Jefferson says that we cannot scientifically avoid pain. We must take account of the paradoxical
nature of human sentiments. Even the
grief we experience over the death of a loved one, Jefferson points out, has
positive dimensions: good memories of the person, a sense of living in fullness. Jefferson suggests that the happy person is
not the one who minimizes pain but the one who cultivates many forms of
“sympathy” and “enthusiasm.” He notes
that there would have been no American revolution if the patriots had worried
too much about the chance of being captured or killed. Instead, the revolutionaries embraced the idea of liberty and they
found joy in their risky commitment.
Jefferson’s ideas aren’t
perfect. I detect at least one
contradiction in his theory of happiness.
He rejects the French for being sexually loose, but he is clearly trying
to seduce Maria Cosway, a married woman, with his brilliant dialogue on the
head and the heart. Also, it’s remarkable
that most of his reflections on happiness are in letters that he addressed to
women. All of the letters I have quoted
here were written to females. Happiness
was a “gendered” topic in Jefferson’s day. It was a personal and subtle topic, belonging more to private
exchanges with women than to the robust dealings among men.
But then, it’s amazing that
Jefferson crossed from the female to the male world: he included the term
“happiness” in the Declaration. He
could have used the more common formula in his time: “life, liberty, and
property.” By going with “happiness”
instead of "property," he brought his feminine side into the public
sphere. He enriched our political
discourse with an intimate expression, a psychological concept whose
ambiguities he understood very well. The phrase "the pursuit of
happiness" is an encouragement to all of us to be machoto do what we wish. But it’s also feminine, in the sense of
conversational: we should discuss with each other what we ought to wish
for. It's a tremendously elevating
concept. It holds up the possibility of
an America that is energetic, and thoughtful about the usages of its
energy.
Jefferson had certain flaws, but
after everything negative that can be said about him has been said, he will
still stand out as the most creative, the most acutely self-conscious American
of his time. Our own happiness may well depend on our willingness to recognize
that he was at least our equal.
--Daniel Gordon, Professor of
History, UMass Amherst