How the Pursuit of Virtue Is the Only Road to Happiness

Connecting our founders’ beliefs to those of classical and Enlightenment thinkers, ‘The Pursuit of Happiness’ charts a roadmap back to a virtuous nation.
How the Pursuit of Virtue Is the Only Road to Happiness
"The Pursuit of Happiness: How Classical Writers on Virtue Inspired the Lives of the Founders and Defined America," by Jeffrey Rosen.
Dustin Bass
2/29/2024
Updated:
2/29/2024
0:00

A common saying is that we stand on the shoulders of giants. Americans stand on the shoulders of their forebears, specifically the founders of this republic. But whose shoulders did the founders stand on?

Jeffrey Rosen, president and CEO of the National Constitutional Center and one of the most respected American constitutional scholars, spent his time wisely during the pandemic. He studied the philosophers, scholars, and religious leaders—Benjamin Franklin, George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, George Mason, John Quincy Adams, Frederick Douglass, and Abraham Lincoln—who influenced the views of later 18th- and 19th-century Americans.

Mr. Rosen’s new book, “The Pursuit of Happiness: How Classical Writers on Virtue Inspired the Lives of the Founders and Defined America,” discusses how before and after the Revolution, these Americans sought to emulate virtuous classical figures. Mr. Rosen was inspired to write the book after he read Jefferson’s recommended list of 10 books on classical and Enlightenment moral philosophy. The successes and failures of the founders’ pursuit of virtue are thematic in the book.

As the title and subtitle suggest, the “pursuit of happiness” (derived from the unalienable rights clause of the Declaration of Independence) revolves around the pursuit of the virtuous life. As Mr. Rosen indicates clearly in his work, the famous phrase hardly originated with Jefferson’s greatest work, but stemmed from the great past philosophers, such as Socrates, Cicero, David Hume, and John Locke.

(L–R) Thomas Jefferson advised no less than two hours of exercise a day, regardless of weather. John Adams opined: “Old minds are like old horses; you must exercise them if you wish to keep them in working order.” Benjamin Franklin walked and lifted weights into his old age. (Public Domain)
(L–R) Thomas Jefferson advised no less than two hours of exercise a day, regardless of weather. John Adams opined: “Old minds are like old horses; you must exercise them if you wish to keep them in working order.” Benjamin Franklin walked and lifted weights into his old age. (Public Domain)

The Difference in ‘Being’ and ‘Feeling’

The idea that happiness is to be pursued by way of leading a virtuous life is just the message that needs to be proclaimed to today’s generation. Mr. Rosen states that this idea has become antithetical to the modern American belief that happiness is attained by “feeling good” rather than “being good.” To reclaim the true meaning of one of the most important American phrases, Mr. Rosen visits classical and Enlightenment history through the readings and writings of our American forebears.

Mr. Rosen begins with Franklin’s 13 virtues: temperance, silence, order, resolution, frugality, industry, sincerity, justice, moderation, cleanliness, tranquility, chastity, and humility. As the book progresses, jumping from founder to founder, Mr. Rosen breaks down how our founders sought to exhibit these virtues (at times successfully, at times not).

The author pinpoints the virtues that the founders personified and those that eluded them. Interestingly, some of these early Americans were quick to criticize their shortcomings, such as Franklin and Adams with vanity, and Washington with anger. This in itself was an example of virtue—sincerity and humility, to be exact.

Along with Franklin’s 13 virtues are Jefferson’s 12 maxims. Just as Franklin pulled from the classical thinkers, Jefferson did as well, but also, it seems, from Franklin. These founders wrote their virtuous pursuits down, practiced them, and admonished themselves when falling short. Their character and integrity were of the utmost importance. Mr. Rosen notes: “It is not a surprise that the founders often fell short of their own ideals of moral perfection. But what is a surprise is the seriousness with which they took the quest, on a daily basis, to become more perfect.”

Classical, Subconscious Influence

Mr. Rosen’s breadth of knowledge concerning not just the founders but also the classical and Enlightenment thinkers is astounding. More so, his ability to connect comments and phrases in the writings of the early Americans to those from thousands of years prior exemplifies his knowledge and illustrates how past philosophical doctrines had even subconsciously infiltrated the mentality of the founders. Additionally, he uses the definitions of these virtues as they would have been understood during the late 18th and early 19th centuries by referencing the Samuel Johnson dictionary.

Mentions of numerous philosophical works are scattered throughout “The Pursuit of Happiness,” but several had the largest effect on these early Americans. Among those are Cicero’s “Tusculan Disputations,” Seneca’s “Morals,” Locke’s “Treatises on Government,” Trenchard and Gordon’s “Cato’s Letters,” and, later in the book, “The Columbian Orator,” a collection of those great works read by Douglass.

The beauty of these works and their educational and inspirational power was that they didn’t simply influence the personal lives of the founders and early American political leaders, but they also influenced how they viewed the purpose of government. The purpose, or end, of government was “societal happiness.”

The Lost Pursuit

Societal happiness seems to be Mr. Rosen’s ultimate pursuit in this book. He notes that Americans of the past were reminded that happiness stemmed from what we used to know—from what the ancients taught us. It is about virtue. It is about “being good” rather than “feeling good.”

Toward the end of the book, Mr. Rosen identifies a moment in American history when this understanding went off the rails. He writes: “As the silent generation of World War II gave way to the ‘me’ generation of baby boomers, the hedonism of the 1960s gave way to the narcissism of the 1970s and the materialism of the 1980s. ‘You do you’ became the new mantra and everyone had an unalienable right to define their own bliss.”

Mr. Rosen presents the wider scope of the problem by referencing the virtuous ideals of justices Louis Brandeis and Ruth Bader Ginsburg, and how they received an education in the public system that still respected and taught those classical thinkers. Mr. Rosen notes that by the time he was in public school, those lessons had been jettisoned.

The author is clearly grieved at what we have dismissed. Indeed, we have dismissed the origins of our country’s concrete and objective “pursuit of happiness” for an abstract and subjective pursuit in both the material and perverse. We have done so at our own peril; and tragically, America has only begun to witness the fruits of that perilous pursuit.

“The Pursuit of Happiness” is a must-read for so many reasons. I believe it is a roadmap toward personal, societal, and national redemption. In a country of advancements and economic wealth, we often only look toward the future at what new technologies, however trivial, lie ahead. But as Mr. Rosen makes abundantly clear, it is time—indeed, it has long been time—to look backward in order to move forward. Perhaps then, we can climb back onto the shoulders of those past greats.

"The Pursuit of Happiness: How Classical Writers on Virtue Inspired the Lives of the Founders and Defined America," by Jeffrey Rosen.
"The Pursuit of Happiness: How Classical Writers on Virtue Inspired the Lives of the Founders and Defined America," by Jeffrey Rosen.
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Dustin Bass is an author and co-host of The Sons of History podcast. He also writes two weekly series for The Epoch Times: Profiles in History and This Week in History.
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