Ecclesiastes 2:2
The verdict that laughter and joy are themselves vanity, or madness, represents a shocking refusal to grant pleasure exemption from the book's overarching judgment. Qohelet does not yet argue that pleasure is evil; rather, he suggests that the pursuit of pleasure as a solution to life's meaninglessness partakes of that same illusory grasping that characterizes wisdom-seeking. The rhetorical question implies that if laughter cannot remedy futility, nothing can—and yet the book will later recommend modest enjoyment, suggesting that pleasure gains value precisely when stripped of redemptive pretensions.