IF YOU WANT TO BUY HAPPINESS YOU ARE MUCH BETTER OFF BUYING AN EXPERIENCE THAN A THING
“Why should we want to control our
futures?
It feels good to do so—Period.
Impact is rewarding. Mattering makes
us happy.”
Stumbling on Happinessis not a useful book on how to be
happy but one that describes what science has to tell us about how and how well
it can predict which of the futures it will most enjoy.
This book is divided into six parts: Prospection,
Subjectivity, Realism, Presentism, Rationalization, and Corrigibility.
The human being is the only animal that thinks about the future
Daniel Gilbert tells that if you were
asked to name the human brain’s greatest achievement, you might think first of
the impressive artifacts it has produced. But he thinks differently.
“In fact, there’s really only one
achievement so remarkable that even the most sophisticated machine cannot
pretend to have accomplished it, and that achievement is conscious experience.
The greatest achievement of the human
brain is its ability to imagine objects and episodes that do not exist in the
realm of the real, and it is this ability that allows us to think about the
future.”
What is the conceptual tie that binds anxiety and planning?
“Both, of course, are intimately
connected to thinking about the future. We feel anxiety when we anticipate that
something bad will happen, and we plan by imagining how our actions will unfold
over time.
Planning requires that we peer into
our futures, and anxiety is one of the reactions we may have when we do.”
People
can be wrong in the present when they say they were wrong in the past
“Our experiences instantly become
part of the lens through which we view our entire past, present and future, and
like any lens, they shape and distort what we see.
This lens is not a pair of spectacles
that we can set on the nightstand when we find it convenient to do so but like
a pair of contacts that are forever affixed to our eyeballs with superglue.
Once we learn to read, we can never again see letters as mere inky squiggles.
If Lora and Reba were separated for a
few weeks, and if they told us that they were happier now than they used to be,
they might be right. But they might not.”
Can we believe we are feeling something we aren’t?
“Our brains are designed to
decide first whether objects count and to decide later what those objects are.
This means that when you turn your head to the left, there is a fraction of a
second during which your brain does not know that it is seeing a wolverine but
does know that it is seeing something scary.”
Daniel Gilbert explains how that can be.
“Research demonstrates that there is enough information in the very
early, very early stages of this identification process to decide whether an
object is scary, but not enough information to know what the object is.”
Why do we so often fail to know what will make us happy in the future?
Stumbling on Happiness says that imagination is a powerful
tool that allows us to conjure images from ‘airy nothing.’
“The best way to understand this
particular shortcoming of imagination (the faculty that allows us to see the
future) is to understand the shortcomings of memory (the faculty that allows us
to see the past) and perception (the faculty that allows us to see the
present).
The shortcoming that causes us to
misremember the past and misperceive the present is the very same shortcoming
that causes us to misimagine the future. That shortcoming is caused by a trick
that your brain plays on you every minute of every hour of every day—a trick
that your brain is playing on you right now.
Daniel Gilbert tells us the brain’s
dirty little secret.
“Our brains take millions of
snapshots, records millions of sounds, add smells, tastes, textures, a third
spatial dimension, a temporal sequence, a continuous running commentary—and
they do this all day, every day, year after year, storing these representations
of the world in a memory bank that seems never to overflow.
How do we cram the vast universe of
our experience into the relatively small storage compartment between our ears?
We cheat.
The elaborate tapestry of our
experience is not stored in memory—at least not in its entirety. . Rather, it is compressed for
storage by first being reduced to a few critical threads, such as a summary
phrase (‘Dinner was disappointing) or a small set of key features (tough steak,
corked wine, snotty waiter). Later, when we want to remember our experience,
our brains quickly reweave the tapestry by fabricating—not by actually
retrieving—the bulk of the information that we experience as memory. This fabrication
happens so quickly and effortlessly that we have the illusion (as a good
magician’s audience always does) that the entire thing was in our heads the
entire time.”
*****
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