Technology and happiness
Dec. 25th, 2004 06:33 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I just found an online version of a cool article I read last week about technology and happiness. Turns out technology in personal life is sort of like money... not having enough can make you bloody miserable, but over a certain point, having more isn't all that great. That's the main point of the article, and probably isn't a surprise.
This quote was especially interesting to me though: One of the key insights of happiness studies is that people have a very hard time being content with what they have, at least when they know that others have more. Today, technological change is so rapid that when you buy something, you do so knowing that in a few months there’s going to be a better, faster version of the product, and that you’re going to be stuck with the old one. Someone else, in other words, has it better. It’s as if disappointment were built into acquisition from the very beginning (unless you’re buying a 70-inch plasma screen, in which case you should be fine for at least a couple of years). There’s no way to circumvent this drooping of the spirit, which creates dissatisfaction in the heart of the modern consumer.
I've thought about this issue before, but never managed to put it so nicely into words though. It's as if disappointment were built into acquisition... at least so long as one is constantly comparing oneself to others. Just one more reason to try not to get hooked on that.
I think one of my aims in the new year might be to study happiness more. Flow is fascinating, but I'm interested in what other happiness researchers have learned too.
This quote was especially interesting to me though: One of the key insights of happiness studies is that people have a very hard time being content with what they have, at least when they know that others have more. Today, technological change is so rapid that when you buy something, you do so knowing that in a few months there’s going to be a better, faster version of the product, and that you’re going to be stuck with the old one. Someone else, in other words, has it better. It’s as if disappointment were built into acquisition from the very beginning (unless you’re buying a 70-inch plasma screen, in which case you should be fine for at least a couple of years). There’s no way to circumvent this drooping of the spirit, which creates dissatisfaction in the heart of the modern consumer.
I've thought about this issue before, but never managed to put it so nicely into words though. It's as if disappointment were built into acquisition... at least so long as one is constantly comparing oneself to others. Just one more reason to try not to get hooked on that.
I think one of my aims in the new year might be to study happiness more. Flow is fascinating, but I'm interested in what other happiness researchers have learned too.
no subject
Date: 2004-12-29 07:15 am (UTC)