Books




"We act as though comfort and luxury were the chief requirements of life, when all that we need to make us happy is something to be enthusiastic about."

- Einstein



2014.10.11 - The Australian - Silicon Valley guru Peter Thiel is on a mission to change the world

When I ask Peter Thiel whether he would describe himself as a happy person, he ponders the question as if it were a complicated mathematical equation.

“Um … let me think about that. Um … I always find it difficult answering that sort of question because it’s hard to precisely compare with other people. It’s such an interior type of thing…” – before finally concluding, “I think so.”







http://www.grossnationalhappiness.com/



 

BRAVE NEW WORLD? A Defence Of Paradise-Engineering

http://www.huxley.net/



http://paradise-engineering.com/

http://www.hedweb.com/


LessWrong articles

http://wiki.lesswrong.com/wiki/Fun_theory

http://lesswrong.com/lw/xy/the_fun_theory_sequence/

http://wiki.lesswrong.com/wiki/Complexity_of_value

http://wiki.lesswrong.com/wiki/Wireheading

http://lesswrong.com/lw/116/the_domain_of_your_utility_function/



The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy - Happiness

http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/happiness/

http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/well-being/

5.2 Mistakes in the pursuit of happiness

A different question is what means of pursuing happiness are most effective. This is fundamentally an empirical question, but there are some in-principle issues that philosophical reflection might inform. One oft-heard claim, commonly called the “paradox of hedonism,” is that the pursuit of happiness is self-defeating; to be happy, don't pursue happiness. It is not clear how to interpret this dictum, however, so that it is both interesting and true. It is plainly imprudent to make happiness one's focus at every moment, but doubtful that this has often been denied. Yet never considering happiness also seems an improbable strategy for becoming happier. If you are choosing among several equally worthwhile occupations, and have good evidence that some of them will make you miserable, while one of them is likely to be highly fulfilling, it would not seem imprudent to take that information into account. Yet to do so just is to pursue happiness. The so-called paradox of hedonism is perhaps best seen as a vague caution against focusing too much on making oneself happy, not a blanket dismissal of the prospects for expressly seeking happiness—and for this modest point there is good empirical evidence (Schooler, Ariely et al. 2003, Lyubomirsky 2007).

That happiness is sometimes worth seeking does not mean we will always do a good job of it. In recent decades a massive body of empirical evidence has gathered on various ways in which people seem systematically prone to make mistakes in the pursuit of their interests, including happiness. Such tendencies have been suggested in several domains relating to the pursuit of happiness, including (with recent surveys cited):

  1. Assessing how happy we are, or were in the past (Haybron 2007a, 2008c)
  2. Predicting (“forecasting”) what will make us happy (Gilbert 2006)
  3. Choosing rationally (Kahneman and Tversky 2000, Gilovitch, Griffin et al. 2002, Hsee and Hastie 2006)

A related body of literature explores the costs and benefits of (ostensibly) making it easier to pursue happiness by increasing people's options; it turns out that having more choices might often make people less happy, for instance by increasing the burdens of deliberation or the likelihood of regret (Schwartz 2004). Less discussed in this context, but highly relevant, is the large body of research indicating that human psychology and behavior are remarkably prone to unconscious social and other situational influences, most infamously reported in the Milgram obedience experiments (Doris 2002). Human functioning, and the pursuit of happiness, may be more profoundly social than many commentators have assumed.










Q: If people adjust to their circumstances, and for every bad day we have a good day, and vice versa, should we bother striving to improve our situation?

- If we assume happiness is a one-dimensional thing, where it can be totally captured by a scale from 0 to 100 (or something like that), and if we assume that all good days are totally balanced by corresponding bad days, and that all bad days are totally balanced by corresponding good days, then I think that would be a situation where it might be pointless to strive to improve our situation.

- But it may not be the case that happiness is a one-dimensional thing; there may be different aspects to happiness. And so that "balancing-out" that we notice (where we have a good day for every bad day, and vice versa) may only apply to one dimension of happiness, and may not apply to another dimension of happiness.






Misc Links


Wikipedia

Happiness
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Happiness

Hedonic treadmill
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hedonic_treadmill

Philosophy of happiness
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philosophy_of_happiness



Warren Buffett talking about how rich people's lives really aren't that different from middle-class people's lives
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GdMIwnhNA3o
- This got me thinking again about how being "rich" isn't what it used to be. In the past being "rich" meant having a lot of needs met that regular-people didn't have met. It was more like the difference between a middle-class existence in the US vs. a subsistence farmer in Vietnam.

10 Simple Things You Can Do Today That Will Make You Happier, Backed By Science
http://www.social-consciousness.com/201 ... e.html?m=1

Quora - If you could time travel and meet your 28-year-old self, what would you say?
http://www.quora.com/What-Would-You-Do- ... ld-you-say

I would say (speaking as an 83 year old)

You only have about 70 years left, so don't waste them on:

Earning more money than you need
Learning more things than you need or are interested in
Buying more items than you need
Getting more friends than you need
Eating more food than you need
Trying to impress people out of vanity
Spending money on conspicuous consumption
Wasting other people's time
Pursuing goals that have no purpose
Getting involved in projects that you have doubts about
Getting involved with people you are not serious about
Trying to be smart for the sake of it
Other people's opinions if you have no intention of accepting them
Imposing your beliefs and opinions on others
Trying to find meaning and purpose in life other than your instincts

I would also say:

Keep a diary
Organise your life
Don't get into debt
Don't assume you will ever have time to do anything you can't do now
Don't involve yourself with people who intend to use you
Don't use other people
Learn to trust those who accept your trust
Value people for their true worth
Learn to talk to your parents
Learn to talk to women (and learn to listen)
Learn to talk to yourself
Learn to believe in yourself
Learn to be tolerant of others
Learn to think before you speak
Learn to think before you answer
Learn to appreciate the moment
Learn to share your thoughts
Learn to respond according to the situation

I know that 70 years sounds like a long time when looking forward. It is yesterday when looking backward. Learn that before it happens.



Tears of the Amazon
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=22sbdLJEbjs
- I like watching stuff like this b/c it helps me think about which of our social habits are built-in and which might be amenable to change (like being embarrassed about being seen naked)






https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5ovH3Q9FRdE







General Advice



Get enough sleep



2014.08.27 - A few weeks ago I began cutting back slightly on sleep to try to copy the behavior of people like Bill Gates. I ended up just feeling bad. For the past two days I've made a point of not using a computer after 10-11pm and I've been going to sleep earlier as a result, and I've been feeling more productive during the day. I find it easier to concentrate.



Spend time talking with people you like




Male-Specific




Female-Specific



Consider having children



When people in their 30s, 40s, and older look back on their life, what are some common regrets they have?
http://www.quora.com/When-people-in-the ... -they-have

I think the mothering instinct is so strong in some women that the knowledge that one will never get a chance to give birth and raise their own child goes beyond regret. One that a bar chart cannot capture. I can deal with most of my other regrets in life but am having a hard time dealing with this one.


- Felix Dennis also said that his greatest regret was not having had a child.




Articles




Companies


Happify
http://www.happify.com/