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Tom Barson's avatar

I'll add to your list of complete, yet-truncated, artistic trajectories. 'The Brothers Karamazov' -- one of the great apexes of the nineteenth century novel -- was to be a two-volume work, in whose second volume the "failed" monk Alyosha was to find his vocation as a revolutionary. It's a metamorphosis that would have struck Dostoevsky's Russian readers as completely logical, but might in retrospect have come to seem utterly banal. Lenin put paid, surely, to the world's guileless Alyoshas as agents of change.

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Thomas Brown's avatar

I'm not in a position to consider, except in the most abstract sense, the daily life of an upper middle class American professional, because I've made choices that have taken me far from a path that would have led to that, but still I would like to make a qualified defense of Noah Smith's argument, or rather a twice-qualified defense, because I haven't read it, I've only read your response.

Noah says that we should try to eliminate suffering; you say that there is no such thing as a happy life without suffering. There is a contradiction here if the two of you have the same conception of suffering, but I'm not sure you do. To take myself as an example, I have never had AIDS, nor have I been in a car accident. But I promise I've suffered enough, all the same! The absence of these particular tragedies in my life have not prevented it from being a life that could, perhaps, in the long run, be called a happy life by you, which is to say a mixed life in the best way.

Isn't it surely the case that the same is true of middle class suburban professionals I am unlikely ever to cross paths with? Don't they face their own frustrations or limitations, make peace with who knows what disappointments, bear them quietly?

But what do AIDS and car crashes have to do it? Isn't Noah right that it is good for society to strive to prevent *that* kind of suffering? Where he's wrong is to suggest that Keith Haring's life would have been happy, had he been a mediocre artist who didn't die young. Coming to terms with being a mediocre artist, and yet still finding happiness in life—now that's something!

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