Tuesday 20 October 2015

hurray for happiness

These days progress and development are measured in terms of Gross National Product (GNP). But, when this increases, the level of happiness stays the same. Note that people in extreme poverty get happier as they get richer but only up to the level where basic needs are met. Wealth above that level does not bring more happiness. This is known as the Happiness Paradox. Many hardnosed books have been written on the topic in the last 20 years. Of these I have read and greatly enjoyed:

  • Abraham Maslow (1962) “Towards a psychology of being”
  • Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi (1992, 2002) “Flow - the classic work on how to achieve happiness”.
  • Martin Seligman (2001) Flourish – a new understanding of happiness and well-being – and how to achieve them”.
  • Jonathan Haidt (2006) “The Happiness Hypothesis – putting ancient wisdom and philosophy to the test of modern science”.
  • Daniel Kahneman (2011) “Thinking, Fast and Slow”.
  • Richard Layard (2005, 2011) “Happiness – Lessons from a new science”.
  • Leo Bormans (Ed) (2012) “The World Book of Happiness”.
  • Thaler, Richard H; Sunstein, Cass R (2012). Nudge: Improving Decisions About Health, Wealth and Happiness”.

Maslow identified a hierarchy of needs ranging from the basics of food, clothing and shelter, through belongingness and security, and onwards to peak experiences and self actualisation.

Seligman noted that traditional psychology aimed to help its clients move from subnormal to normal. He thus invented positive psychology which aims to help its clients move from normal to supernormal. He wrote an influential book about how to flourish and promote well being. It is a multidimensional process that is best approached on a multidisciplinary basis

The feeling of happiness has its biochemical and electrical correlates. Large gaggles of Neurologists are working on the details. The good news is neuroplasticity – by taking thought we can change our brains.

Human beings are social animals. We evolved to belong to a family, group, nation state, planet. Happiness is other people – at work, rest and play. Existing circumstances might not be all that good and there might be need for changes; cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) now has oodles of tricks up its sleeves that can help out.

But we should not bite off more than we can chew. The serenity prayer offers a rule of thumb:

O God, give us the serenity to accept what cannot be changed,
The courage to change what can be changed,
and the wisdom to know the one from the other

Note for the hardnosed: the poetic notion of “O God, give us ...” suggests an anthropomorphic and metaphorical view of agency. A less poetic rendering of the notion would be, “May the unconscious churn in my mindbrain, with support from CBT (and/or mindfulness meditation) (and/or psychotropic medication), generate ...”.

There are two types of changes - in mind (internal) and in material circumstances (external). The latter include socio-cultural aspects of politics and economics including religion and the environment. And they scale along a continuum ranging from self, through family, community, nation and globe.

There is now an emerging alternative to the simplistic GNP. It is called Gross National Happiness (GNH) and is the basis of national planning in Bhutan and Nepal. It is also a topic of increasingly serious academic concern. For example the New Economics Foundation (NEF) has been developing a Measure of Domestic Progress (MDP).

Richard Layard's 2011 book (see above) covers most of the issues and was part inspiration for the website www.actionforhappiness.org which contains a lot of useful materials.

My subjective take on the topic is that happiness is a means to the end of achieving peace of mind which manifests as unattachment and serenity. A more holistic,intellectual and multidisciplinary approach will help with this but the real engine is direct experience of being non-egoic and mindful - of flowing and flourishing

Hurry for happiness.

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