24
The Meanings of ‘Happiness’ and What They Mean for Policymaking Dan Weijers 20 October 2011

The Meanings of ‘Happiness’ and What They Mean for Policymaking Dan Weijers 20 October 2011

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

The Meanings of

‘Happiness’ and What They Mean for

Policymaking

Dan Weijers20 October 2011

Well-Being

• What makes someone's life go better/best for them?

The prudentially good life

The life that is good for the one living it

Well-being

Happiness ≠ well-being?

• Some accounts just use happiness– Some don’t use it at all

• Key Questions: – What are the ultimate bearers of

prudential value for us?– What directly makes our lives go better

for us?

Policy-making ↑ Well-being

(WB)

FairnessSustainability

Equality

Subjective WB Objective WB

Overall Domain-Specific

Mental state/

hedonism

Life Satisfaction

theories

Objective List/

Flourishing

Quality of Life Indicators

Traditional Economic Indicators

Health/ healthcareFreedom

TrustSafety

Environ-ment

EducationEquality

Production

IncomeEmploy-

ment

Justice

Wealth• Survey• Pager• Day

reco-nstruction

• Survey• “All things

considered, how satisfied are you with your life?”

• Survey• Rate

agreement “I have good friends”

HAPPINESS

Happiness

Brain scan

Behav-ioural

Mental State Theories

• Folk: get pleasure now!• Philosophers: maximise pleasure over your entire

life• Key: All that matters is how you feel (your mental

states)

Well-being Happiness +ve net balance of good over bad mental states

Especially hedonism

What about Truth & Freedom?• Compare two lives

– Same experiences– Different reality

• Double agent partner• Sponsored children all died

• Whose life is better?

• What should we do about a happy slave?

Measuring Mental State Happiness

• Survey Questions– “How happy are you these days?”

• Pager method– “What are you doing now and how are

you feeling?”• Day reconstruction method

– Note down activities and mood from previous day

Life Satisfaction Theories

• Based on desire/preference-satisfaction• Informed: adequately informed desires only• Ideal: desires that fit some objective criteria only • Key: All that matters is getting what you want

Well-beingHappinessHaving most or more of your desires satisfied

Sometimes

Is the Satisfaction of Our Desires Good for us?

• Actual and informed desires are often for things that are, on balance, bad for us!

• Ideal desires require some kind of objective standard

• We choose to desire things because we think that their satisfaction will provide us with some value or meaning

• D-S accounts put the value in the satisfaction, not the ultimate reason for having the desire

Measuring Life Satisfaction Happiness

• Survey Questions:– “All things considered, how satisfied are you

with your life as a whole?”– “Compared to what it could have been, how

satisfied are you with your life?”

Flourishing Theories

• Developing excellencies in one or all of your species’ fundamental traits

• Only some versions include or require happiness/enjoyment of life

• Aristotle: Flourishing is the soul expressing virtue– Virtues are ‘golden means’

• E.g. cowardice – courage - rashness• Key: All that matters is being the best

you can be (given that you’re a human)

Well-being Flourishing Developing & expressing natural capacities

Flourishing = Objective List

• But, which traits do you prioritise? – Is excellence in reasoning or long-

distance running better for us?• Unnatural things can be good for us

too!– E.g. Pacemakers, wings etc.

• We end up with a list of things that are good for us

Objective List = ‘Objective’ List

• A list of the ultimate goods• Most objective list theories lack justification

for their irreducible goods • E.g. Ross’ account:

– Knowledge, Pleasure, Virtue and the proper apportionment of pleasure to virtue

• Can’t we explain knowledge with pleasure or desire-satisfaction?

• Why is it ultimately better for me that my pleasure comes from virtue?

Who Are We to Write the Objective List?

• Is there any objective truth to what constitutes the prudential good life?

Measuring Objective List/Flourishing Well-Being

• Survey Questions:– “Rate the extent to which you agree with the

following statements”• I maintain many good friendships• My life is meaningful• I am a virtuous person• I am rarely deceived• I am very knowledgeable• I am free to act as I please (when not harming others)• I live in a pristine environment

Policy-making ↑ Well-being

(WB)

FairnessSustainability

Equality

Subjective WB Objective WB

Overall Domain-Specific

Mental state/

hedonism

Life Satisfaction

theories

Objective List/

Flourishing

Quality of Life Indicators

Traditional Economic Indicators

Health/ healthcareFreedom

TrustSafety

Environ-ment

EducationEquality

Production

IncomeEmploy-

ment

Justice

Wealth• Survey• Pager• Day

reco-nstruction

• Survey• “All things

considered, how satisfied are you with your life?”

• Survey• Rate

agreement “I have good friends”

HAPPINESS

Happiness

Brain scan

Behav-ioural

SWB Survey Problems

• Appraisal biases– Test-specific– Greater context

• Aspirational biases

Conceptual Problem

• It’s so subjective!

• Is there an objective basis for happiness?

• Brain scans• Behavioural

analysis (e.g. smiles)

Case: Income vs. Happiness• Measures of income:

– Used by economists & politicians– Key indicator of ‘national progress’

• Income is an indicator of ability to satisfy preferences

• More income is good because it makes you more free and more happy

Does $$ Make Us Happy?

Materialism Doesn’t Pay

Very High

Why Not Measure Happiness & Freedom?

• But which measures to use?• Which measures capture the most of

the prudential good life?• Is it more important to be happy or

satisfied?• In a capitalist democracy, we might

have to put these things to a vote or let the market decide…

Policy-making ↑ Well-being

(WB)

FairnessSustainability

Equality

Subjective WB Objective WB

Overall Domain-Specific

Mental state/

hedonism

Life Satisfaction

theories

Objective List/

Flourishing

Quality of Life Indicators

Traditional Economic Indicators

Health/ healthcareFreedom

TrustSafety

Environ-ment

EducationEquality

Production

IncomeEmploy-

ment

Justice

Wealth• Survey• Pager• Day

reco-nstruction

• Survey• “All things

considered, how satisfied are you with your life?”

• Survey• Rate

agreement “I have good friends”

HAPPINESS

Happiness

Brain scan

Behav-ioural