首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Why Money Doesn’t Buy Happiness What do the experts say? [A]All in all, it was probably a mistake to look for the answer to the
Why Money Doesn’t Buy Happiness What do the experts say? [A]All in all, it was probably a mistake to look for the answer to the
admin
2018-04-07
40
问题
Why Money Doesn’t Buy Happiness
What do the experts say?
[A]All in all, it was probably a mistake to look for the answer to the eternal question—"Does money buy happiness?"—from people who practice what’s called the gloomy science. For when economists tackled the question, they started from the observation that when people put something up for sale they try to get as much for it as they can, and when people buy something they try to pay as little for it as they can. Both sides in the transaction, the economists noticed, are therefore behaving as if they would be more satisfied, or happier, dare we say, if they ended up receiving more money(the seller)or holding on to more money(the buyer). Hence, more money must be better than less, and the only way more of something can be better than less of it is if it brings you greater satisfaction. The economists’ conclusion: the more money you have, the happier you must be.
[B]Suicidal CEOs, miserable magnates(大资本家)and other unhappy rich folks aren’t the only ones giving the lie to this. "Psychologists have spent decades studying the relation between wealth and happiness," writes Harvard University psychologist Daniel Gilbert and they have generally concluded that wealth increases human happiness when it lifts people out of extreme poverty and into the middle class but that it does little to increase happiness thereafter.
[C]That flies in the face of intuition(直觉), not to mention economic theory. According to standard economics, the most important commodity you can buy with additional wealth is choice. If you have $20 in your pocket, you can decide between steak and peanut butter for dinner, but if you have only $1 you’d better hope you already have a jar of jelly at home. Additional wealth also lets you satisfy additional needs and wants, and the more of those you satisfy the happier you are supposed to be.
[D]The trouble is, choice is not all it’s cracked up to be. Studies show that people like selecting from among maybe half a dozen kinds of food at the grocery store but find 27 choices ovenvhelming, leaving them habitually on edge that they could have chosen a better one than they did. And wants, which are nice to be able to afford, have a bad habit of becoming needs. Satisfying needs brings less emotional well-being than satisfying wants.
What do the common people say?
[E]The nonlinear(非线性的)nature of how much happiness money can buy comes through clearly in global surveys that ask people how satisfied they feel with their lives. In a typical survey people are asked to rank their sense of well-being or happiness on a scale of 1 to 7, where 1 means "not at all satisfied with my life" and 7 means "completely satisfied." Of the American multimillionaires who responded, the average happiness score was 5.8. Homeless people in Calcutta came in at 2.9. But before you assume that money does buy happiness after all, consider who else rated themselves around 5.8: the Inuit of northern Greenland, who do not exactly lead a life of luxury, and the cattle-herding Masai of Kenya, whose huts have no electricity or running water. And proving Gilbert’s point about money buying happiness only when it lifts you out of extreme poverty, slum dwellers in Calcutta—one economic rung above the homeless—rate themselves at 4.6.
[F]Studies tracking changes in a population’s reported level of happiness over time have also dealt a death blow to the money-buys-happiness claim. Since World War II the gross domestic product(GDP)per capita has tripled in the United States. But people’s sense of well-being has barely been altered. Japan has had an even more dramatic rise in GDP per capita since its postwar misery, but measures of national happiness have been flat, as they have also been in Western Europe during its long postwar boom, according to social psychologist Ruut Veenhoven. An analysis of more than 150 studies on wealth and happiness concluded that "economic indicators have obvious shortcomings" as approximations of well-being across nations.
[G]That’s partly because in an expanding economy, in which former luxuries such as washing machines become necessities, the newly well-off people don’t feel the same joy in having a machine do the laundry that their grandparents, suddenly freed from washboards, did. They just take the machines for granted. Another reason is that an expanding paycheck, especially in an expanding economy, produces expanding aspirations and a sense that there is always one more cool thing out there that you absolutely have to have.
If money doesn’t buy happiness, what does?
[H]Grandma was right when she told you to value health and friends, not money and stuff. Researchers add fulfillment, a sense that life has meaning, belonging to civil and other groups, and living in a democracy that respects individual rights and the rule of law. If a nation wants to increase its population’s sense of well-being, says Veenhoven, it should make "less investment in economic growth and more in policies that promote good governance, liberties, democracy, trust and public safety."
[I]Curiously, although money doesn’t buy happiness, happiness can buy money. Young people who describe themselves as happy typically earn higher incomes, years later, than those who said they were unhappy. It seems that a sense of well-being can make you more productive and more likely to show initiative and other traits that lead to a higher income. Contented(知足的)people are also more likely to marry and stay married, as well as to be healthy, both of which increase happiness.
[J]If more money doesn’t buy more happiness, then the behavior of most Americans looks downright insane, as we work harder and longer, decade after decade. But what is insane for an individual is crucial for a national economy—that is, ever more growth and consumption. Gilbert again: "Economies can blossom and grow only if people are deceived into believing that the production of wealth will make them happy... Economies thrive when individuals strive, but because individuals will strive only for their own happiness, it is essential that they mistakenly believe that producing and consuming are routes to personal well-being." In other words, if you want to do your part for your country’s economy, forget all of the above about money not buying happiness.
It is necessary for people to believe producing and consuming are routes to personal well-being for a thriving economy.
选项
答案
J
解析
根据producing and consuming及thriving economy等关键信息可定位至J段倒数第2句。本题用necessary替代了原文的essential,两句所述一致,故确定J段为本题出处。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/2o47777K
0
大学英语四级
相关试题推荐
丝绸之路(theSilkRoad)是中国古代的一条商业贸易路线(traderoute)。丝绸之路以古代中国的政治、经济、文化中心——古都长安为起点,一直延伸至中亚、北非和欧洲。它最初的作用是出口中国生产的丝绸。随着时间的推移,丝绸之路逐渐变成了一条连
Mostpeopleoftendreamatnight.Whentheywakeinthemorningtheysaytothemselves,"WhatastrangedreamIhad!Iwonderwh
SomeAmericansarealittlenervousaboutthenation’sfuture,butothersfeelsecure,knowingthatthemantheyconsiderthemo
ThoughtsofsuicidehauntedAnitaRutnamlongbeforeshearrivedatSyracuseUniversity.Shehadahistoryofmentalillnessand
Thereisapopularbeliefamongparentsthatschoolsarenolongerinterestedinspelling.Thisis,however,a【C1】______.Nosch
Carsandotherroadvehiclesarethesinglemainsourceofharmfulnitrogenoxides.Roadtransportremainsthebiggestsourc
A、Syntheticfuel.B、Solarenergy.C、Alcohol.D、Electricity.D题目询问在未来的几十年中,将使用什么来发动汽车。关键在于听到文章的第2句:“每个人都将驾驶由电力发动的汽车(electrically-
A、Aworldbanonnuclearweapons.B、Japan’sdevelopmentofnuclearweapons.C、SuspendingnuclearresearchinJapan.D、Aworldba
A、Itwasquitestableandcarefree.B、Itwasnoteasytosurvive.C、Peopleenjoyedalonghealthylife.D、Peopleneedn’tworkha
A、Hehastomeetanimportantclient.B、Hehastoattendanimportantmeeting.C、Hehastoattendabusinessdiscussion.D、Heha
随机试题
计算二重积分dσ,其中D是由圆x2+y2=3所围成的闭区域.
阿托品应用注意事项是:
A.氟哌啶醇B.丙咪嗪C.芬太尼D.氯氮平E.苯海索用于治疗抑郁症的药物是
卖蛙人肖某系某农贸市场水产个体经营户,1996年1月7日,在某农贸市场出售青蛙,被野生动植物自然保护站工作人员发现,当即抽样检查认定是虎蚊蛙,为国家二级保护野生动物。根据《野生动物保护法》的规定:出售,收购、运输、携带国家和地方重点保护野生动物或者其产品的
土基达到最大干密度所对应的含水量是()。
货币政策四大目标之间存在矛盾,任何一个国家要想同时实现是很困难的,但其中()是一致的。
维生素A缺乏时眼部可能出现的症状有()
在企业价值链中,基本增值活动包括()。
资产负债利率敏感性管理
设3阶方阵A=(α1,α2,α3)的3个特征值各不相同,且3维列向量α1,α2,α3满足α1=α2+2α3,则r(A)=__________.
最新回复
(
0
)