R. Aryeh Kaplan, in his *The Living Torah*, states that Eden is "Delight in Hebrew."

The latest edition of the Encyclopedia Judaica essentially states this as well. It discusses the derivations that DanF cites in his answer, but ultimately states this: 

> More likely is the connection with the Hebrew root ʿ *dn*, attested in such words as *ma ʿ danim*, "dainties," "luxury items" (Gen. 49:20; Lam. 4:5) ʿ *ednah*, "pleasure," (Gen. 18:12), ʿ *adinah*, "pampered woman" (Isa. 47:8); and in Old Aramaic *m ʿ dn* "provider of abundance," which would be a transparent etymology for the name of a divine garden. The Septuagint apparently derived Eden from ʿ *dn*, translating *gan ʿ eden* (Gen. 3:23–4) by *ho paradeisos tēs truphēs*, "the park of luxuries," whence English "paradise."