by Emily Curwood
There has
always been a stigma surrounding philosophy and its beliefs, people often view
the subject as a labyrinth of juxtaposing ideas, the definition of philosophy
itself seems to be a long unending sequence of words; Philosophy is the
study of general and fundamental questions about existence, knowledge, values,
reason, mind, and language. As a result, many see studying or immersing
oneself in philosophy as counterproductive, an endless discussion and a trail
of counterarguments with no end in sight. Furthermore, others see it as simply
unnecessary, citing the fact that these often-existential questions have no
impact on our lives so doesn’t need to be discussed or are ‘too deep’ or ‘too
depressing’ to talk about. However, philosophy is important, not necessarily on
what it contains or the questions it asks but the way of thinking it
introduces. The critical thinking and deeper analysis on matters that philosophy
focuses around can be applied to normal day to day occurrences, something that
does have an impact on our lives.
The Good Place uses philosophy to assert this
concept, using the many different beliefs or philosophers as a tool to develop
an episode, turning the subject into something that provides a deeper meaning
regarding the shows plot. In one episode the argument of free will vs
determinism is used by the main antagonist bringing about the idea that all our
actions are predetermined and influenced by our environment, genetics and
upbringing- the definition she reads out of a book called “Philosophy for
Dingdongs” states “Determinism is the theory that we have no control over our
own actions, everything we do happens because of some external force, which
exists outside of our control”. This statement that there is no such thing as
free will is integrated into the episode and used in relatable circumstances to
allow the viewer to understand complex philosophical debates; when she is asked
if she would like a drink she answers, “Maybe I do, maybe I don’t. But whatever
I choose will be the result of millions of biological, genetic and societal
factors that are entirely outside my control”.
But the real
success of The Good Place and why is has had such an impact on the television
world is because it goes beyond raising the philosophical questions we have
asked and been trying to answer for thousands of years and provides their own
answer. The whole show centralises on the possibly one of the most discussed
questions; what happens after we die. While at first the answer the show
provides seems ridiculous and has solely comedic purposes it evolves into
something more complex, something that makes the viewer think in that critical
way. The show makes it clear that something that seems justifiable on the
surface always leads down of path of questions and issues, take heaven (or ‘the
good place’) as an example; it is viewed, on the surface, as a place which one
could never be sad or discontent, that surely having everything you ever wanted
is the ultimate goal. But the oxymoron that having everything you could ever
dream of and it being terrible is thought-provoking; the fact that when you
have everything in the palm of your hand the satisfaction dwindles and the
enjoyment of the achievement is so common and completely undermined that it
disappears. And that it why philosophy is portrayed with such success in this
programme, not just because it simplifies it down and makes it relatable to
everyday scenarios but because of the way it makes us ask questions, and come
to answers, we never thought we would.
I enjoyed reading your article. I am a fan of the Good Life. You are right that it raises really interesting questions and provides some very thought provoking answers. Not least, as you say, the idea that having all we want and desire would actually be a form of hell. It is just a shame the ethics teacher ends up in hell! I also liked your discussion of determinism. I am a full blown determinist and think we do not have free will or choice, we just think we do. At the moment we are waiting for some form of artificial intelligence to calculate all the factors and interactions that make us do what we do. The best bit is that once this sort of super computer exists then we should also be able to predict the future, including of course our response to the predictions. Ethics will then no longer be about choices. But this is all perhaps a while off! Thank you for your article which was great and reminded me to watch a bit mroe TV!
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