The discussion about the relativity of happiness to success seems to have been left unresolved in our class. One side believed it to be ludicrous to relate success and happiness with each other. The two terms are completely separate ideas and the saying that one is happy and therefore he or she is successful is null. According to this party, the happiness of an individual should never be an instrument by which to measure success. I tended to side with the arguments put forth by this group of individuals during the class discussion. The other side’s arguments were unclear to myself but I believe they were attempting legitimize the lifestyles of characters in the play by saying that if they are happy then they are successful.
The argument seemed to be at a stalemate when the second group couldn’t seem to comprehend Matt Rosenzweig’s comment that if this latter belief were true, then everyone would be happy because there would be something in every individual case that could legitimize them, no matter how successful they actually were. When presented with the counterargument of what measures success, we came up with one- the Greenberg scale. Although not a trained statistician myself, I constantly attempt to estimate the successes of the characters in the play along this scale.
There are obviously very few successful individuals in the play that we directly encounter, if any at all. This is easily seen even without the made-up, standardized Greenberg scale of success. Willy is an aging man who cannot afford to retire and is so bad at his job that he is on commission, not even a stable salary. His wife is in the same situation as he is, relying on their two sons to care for them in old age; but this turns out to be a poor decision. Their first son, Biff, is in his 30s and cannot find an adequate job because he is “restless.” This problem most likely stems from his high school days when he was a University of Virginia prospect. It is not uncommon to see former athletes unable to find their niche in society after all the fame, glory, and attention passes them by. How can one find solace in the joys of life after having played on the big stage in front of tons of fans? Their younger son, Happy, is somewhat better but clearly cannot support the entire family. He holds a respectable job with a decent salary, and the reader does not learn much of Happy’s personality other then that he seems to be an extreme womanizer.
Anyway you look at it, these individuals have contributed nothing positive to society or to themselves. A successful individual might be a selfish one, amassing a fortune for him or herself, or a generous one, giving up all possessions to help others. The Lomax family falls under neither of these categories and thus, I conclude, is not successful in any nuance of the term.
(496)
Sunday, March 8, 2009
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
3 comments:
While I won't rehash the class discussion here, I am still not convinced that success can only be measured in the Greenberg scale. Measuring success only via financial wealth and societal position is extremely cynical. While the Lomax family is not amazingly successful, their is something to be said about surviving in mediocrity. They weren't criminals, they paid off their debts, they were good, if not lazy people. I am not sure this discussion will ever be settled, but good post anyway.
Andrew I am afraid that I must disagree with you on this blog. If you read mine you will see that I have written about how Willy can be seen as a successful man, and so I am inclined to disagree on your argument. I believe that happiness while not a direct correlation to success is important to success as a whole. You supported your argument well and I commend your thoughts but I am sorry to say that we differ in opinion
CHANG-A-LANG!
Ho ho!
Of course success will the the focus of everyone's blogs. Your blog is very well-written, which is of course up to my standards, but then again, everything you have ever done has been up to my standards. Especially that one things.
Also, I quite enjoy your blogs name! It is quaint.
HAAAVVAA!
Signed,
Rev-Dr. Eric Tiberius Fram XIV, Champion of Erudition
-------------------------------
-High Treasurer of the Gold Vaults
-First Citizen of the Classical League
-American Director of the American League of American Americans
-Chairman of the Sub-Committee for the Discussion of Sub-Committees
-Director of the Bureau of Bureaucracy
-------------------------------------
Post a Comment