hedonism
The philosophy of hedonism taught that people should seek pleasure and avoid pain. This idea was popularized by philosophers such as Epicurus and later by Jeremy Bentham and John Stuart Mill in utilitarianism. Hedonism suggests that maximizing pleasure and minimizing pain is the ultimate goal in life.
Epicureans taught that the highest goal in life is to seek pleasure and avoid pain, with pleasure defined as the absence of physical and mental suffering. They emphasized living a simple and self-sufficient life, free from anxieties and unnecessary desires, in order to achieve a state of tranquility and contentment.
It is often referred to as masochism, but this refers really to sexual pleasure derived from certain kinds of pain and humiliation.
The term for someone who derives pleasure from self-inflicted pain is "masochist."
Yes, there can be a thin line between pleasure and pain as both experiences can involve intense sensory and emotional feelings that may be closely linked in certain situations. Some individuals may even find pleasure in pain or experience a mix of both sensations when engaging in certain activities.
Masochism - it's when you get pleasure out of pain.
Least resistance (Darwin) or Pleasure principle ( Freud). it is not called a law but a Line of least resistance- as Darwin (evolved) the term.
Modern hedonism was defined in 1789 by Jeremy Bentham in "An Introduction to the Principles of Morals and Legislation."The basic premise of hedonism is that the human psyche and actions are ruled by pain or pleasure. If a person eats, it is to avoid the pain of hunger or to gain the pleasure of taste. If a person gives "sacrificially" to charity, it is to gain the internal pleasure of having helped. If a person painfully sacrifices certain pleasurable activities through religious belief, it is to avoid a perceived future pain of punishment or guilt.
Pain and Pleasure - 1967 was released on: USA: 30 March 1967
Pain Is So Close to Pleasure was created on 1986-03-17.
Our brains are our greatest tools, also they are our most useful teaching devices. The two sensations that teach us how to function best in the animal sense are pain and pleasure. Pain tells us we have done something wrong and should avoid that. Pleasure tells us we have done something right and should repeat it. I believe that the day we can teach computers to feel pain and pleasure is the day they will finally awaken, and become self aware. http:/www.politicallyincorrectts.com
In Japan and in Korea people lie on hard floor and it helps them to avoid from back pain.