Among the true pleasures, they recognize first simple sensory or bodily pleasures — eating, drinking, and performing the act of love as being sanctioned by nature. These actions, necessary for the preservation or propagation of life, are ordained by providence to be pleasurable. To those sensory pleasures may be added music, which makes its appeal to both body and mind. They also add to the list of true pleasures the sense of well-being and those high spirits that derive from good health.
Bodily pleasures are valued only to the extent to which they fulfill necessities; ". . . yet they rejoice in them, and with due gratitude acknowledge the tenderness of the great Author of Nature, who has planted in us appetites, by which those things that are necessary for our preservation are likewise made pleasant to us."
The pleasures of the mind are held in higher esteem than those of the body. They show themselves eager in their pursuit of knowledge in almost every field. Hythloday and his companions taught some of their good scholars to read Greek, in which study they proved very apt; when Hythloday's party left the country, he gave the Utopians the books he had with him, much to their delight. These were works of Plato, Aristotle, Homer, Sophocles, Euripides, Plutarch, Herodotus, Thucydides, Hippocrates, and Galen.
The Utopians are especially studious in matters of health and medicine, even though as a race they are exceptionally healthy. It is their belief that God approves of those who inquire into and admire the complexities of His creation.
Hythloday and his friends taught the Utopians to make paper and introduced them to the techniques of printing, which they soon mastered so that they began producing copies of the books they had on a very considerable scale.






















