• London blog by London

    Musings on London science.

    • Happy now?

      Thursday, 03 Sep 2009 - 10:08 UTC

      Greetings my friends.

      I have been giving some thought, as might be expected of the advocate of utilitarianism, to the issue of happiness. According to recent research, gross domestic product (GDP)in Britain has all but doubled in the the last thirty-five years, whilst a ‘Life satisfaction index’, which purports to measure levels of happiness, has hardly shifted. The relative encrease in wealth since my own demise, some one hundred and seventy-seven years ago, must be significantly greater than that recorded by this research over a much shorter period, but I would not be surprised to find that people were not that much happier than they were in 1832. The question, over whatever time-scale, remains: if wealth is the source of happiness, why hasn’t encreasing wealth made us happier?

      That wealth was a source of happiness I never doubted: of two individuals, he who possesses the most wealth will posses the greatest happiness, or chance of happiness. However, long before modern economics gave it a name, I identified diminishing marginal utility, and applied it to wealth. As a young man, I doubted that a King was five times happier than a poor labourer; towards the end of my life I doubted that multiplying an individual’s wealth ten thousand times would so much as double their happiness. Accordingly, I remain unsurprised by the stubborn immobility of the life satisfaction index in the face of encreasing wealth.

      My contentment at seeing the developing body of empirical evidence for my own ‘axioms of mental pathology’ was cut short by the disquieting realization that the psychological foundations of my theory took it for granted that human beings typically wished to encrease their wealth, and that the acquisition of wealth delivered more, and more lasting, pleasure than its actual possession. While I had no doubt that the maximization of happiness, not of wealth, was the proper end of legislation, and while I appreciated that human beings desired many things other than wealth, I did think that growing prosperity brought true happiness. The important point was not so much to be rich, as to be_come_ rich_er_. The universal desire materially to improve one’s economic position, which I adopted without qualification from Adam Smith, did entail that encreasing wealth, or abundance, was a legitimate goal of state policy—albeit a lesser one than subsistence or security, and one best achieved through the latter, in the form of liberty under law. In my day, neither the potential exhaustion of the resources of the globe, nor calamitous climate change resulting from human actions undertaken in pursuit of growing wealth, entered the utility calculation.

      I note that this situation has radically altered, and could wish that I were alive now, so that my genius could grapple with these issues. True, the first condition for the investment of effort or industry by individuals was hunger, but subsistence had natural limits, and once bellies were full, the natural aversion to the pains of labour could only be expected to be overcome by the anticipation of rewards in the shape of growing personal wealth, the hope of which was to my mind the greatest of all blessings. There was simply no limit to the bounds of wealth, meaning simply instruments of enjoyment, while the pursuit of happiness by means of the pursuit of wealth seemed to me a psychological datum of human beings. My own instinctive view was that a state or economy which self-consciously eschewed growth, what young John Mill would later go on to delineate in terms of some approbation as a ‘stationary state’, would be an unremittingly miserable place, in which economic life would be what modern theorists, I believe, call a zero-sum game, where every gain in wealth for one person entailed a loss of wealth for another, so that competition for ownership of resources threatened to become not so much ‘dog-eat-dog’ but ‘man-eat-man’. I may have been realistic about the actual benefits—as regards happiness—consequent upon the possession of wealth, but I remained convinced that the hope of encreasing one’s wealth, and thereby one’s happiness, was the engine that drove civilization forwards, even if that hope was in fact sustained by a misapprehension about the relation of wealth to happiness. Further thought needed here I think: perhaps I should email young Layard

      Yours ever,

      J.B.

      Last updated: Thursday, 03 Sep 2009 - 10:08 UTC

      • Comments

        • Date:
          Friday, 04 Sep 2009 - 09:19 UTC
          Shell Grayson said:

          Just reading that blog post made me happier

        • Date:
          Friday, 18 Sep 2009 - 08:29 UTC
          Anand S said:

          The present day environment is full of honking of cars, buses trying to screech through the crowds and people running hard for their livelihood, trying to meet both ends meet. There is hardly any time for relaxing and even if you have to relax you need to find a place where there is no noise, a calm place where people are not breathing behind your neck.
          I looked for a place of this kind but it was hard to find when I stumbled on this website www.wildelephant.net a cosy resort called the Wild Elephant Resort in Munnar, Kerala, India. Looking at the website it seemed quite interesting although being a systems guy myself I had the knowledge of all that can be done on Photoshop to make a website look inviting.
          I decided to take the chance and drove down to Munnar from Bangalore and when I reached the place itself it was exhilirating the view itself and the pindrop silence with the only sound of crickets. I had found my place – yes the place I had been looking for for many years and that too in India. There is no mobile coverage here and if you have to call you need to use the Wireless (WLL) phone to call out. There is only one TV set in the restaurant which has TATA SKY on it and one can see programmes here, but who wants to see the TV (Idiot Box) when there is so much of nature to see. One can see the tea gardens, the waterfall opposite to the resort from where the resort gets its water.
          The trekking in the morning was great, with the walk upto the waterfalls and the magic tree the bark of which has different colours which is truly amazing. I felt how little we know about Nature and how much we have distanced ourselves from Nature and God. Can one imagine that the bark of a tree could change colours in different seasons?
          I also took the jungle safari by jeep the next day and had the opportunity to see waterfalls, hanging bridges, Flowing rivers and wooden bridges. The bath in one of the flowing rivers was great where I was guided by one of the resort staff to sit in a place where there was a gushing flow of water which had a great massaging effect on my back and neck.
          The staff are well trained and they take you to the right places where you would be able to enjoy with Nature to the maximum, and the food available in the resort is so homely and simple that you would end up eating more than you normally do. I donot know whether this was due to the unpolluted environment and clear water or due to the running around I had a late Lunch and went off to sleep only to be woken up at around 6 30 pm and being told that a herd of wild elephants have been seen in Anakulam about 12 kms away. I jumped into the jeep and we were on the move and we happened to reach on time when a herd of over 60 elephants including babies were playing and drinking water. It was a great sight I must say, and I had seen more than I had asked for, and was happy that I could leave with satisfaction.
          I will come back again surely when I get tired of my city and I dont think there is anything which can replace the expereince which I had here.


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