Stumbling on Happiness

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Stumbling on Happiness

Stumbling on Happiness


Stumbling on Happiness


Download PDF Stumbling on Happiness

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Stumbling on Happiness

Product details

Paperback: 336 pages

Publisher: Vintage (March 20, 2007)

Language: English

ISBN-10: 9781400077427

ISBN-13: 978-1400077427

ASIN: 1400077427

Product Dimensions:

5.2 x 0.7 x 8 inches

Shipping Weight: 9.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)

Average Customer Review:

4.0 out of 5 stars

614 customer reviews

Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#10,880 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

I bought this after listening to one of the author's TED talks. It has a lot of interesting information about some of our odd quirks. The writing, like the author's speeches, is very humorous. I thoroughly enjoyed reading it.

The brain is a silly thing. You like to think of it as a supercomputer that runs your life, but it is far from that. The brain does not store memories like a hard drive. Its recall process seems completely ineffective. Compared to other animals, our brains are huge and they take up an unfathomable amount of energy. Yet our brains are more effective that any computer on earth.Stumbling on Happiness is a fun stroll through brain studies throughout history. Over and over again, Gilbert introduces another study that shows you the silliness of your brain. By the end of the book, you will wonder how we have accomplished so much as humans.This is fun read. It is not a deep book but a great light-hearted look at the silly side of our humanness.

This book is yet another entry in the Gladwell-esque academic-discoveries-for-the-masses category and has the same issues: an exciting premise (why do we fail at forecasting happiness / our imagination has flaws), a casual and sometimes witty voice and most importantly, an excessive length relative to its subject matter. The whole “your brain has flaws” argument has much in common with better books such as Kahneman’s and this book suffers from a lack of narrative arc: it’s stuffed too full of experiments and observations and doesn’t actually drive towards its conclusion - which is something that can be accomplished much more quickly than 260 pages.

No one book will ever solve all your problems and show you The Way. As Seneca said, "As long as you live, keep learning to live." But even that learning bit is not easy with all the noise of experience. That's where Daniel Gilbert's little nugget helps. It helps you eliminate a lot of noise with some powerful insights drawn from psychological studies. The three most useful for me are these: (1) It's not the future as such, but it's the planning for the future that makes you anxious. (2) All your planning for, say, five years later is based on the implicit assumption that you will be the same as you are now and think the same as you do now, five years later. (3) Quite likely, your particular circumstances are not entirely new to humanity and someone has been on the path (or parts of the path) you will end up taking so you can learn from them. So be ready to stumble and you may stumble on happiness. (This review is for the print version of the book. I also ordered a Kindle version to keep on my smartphone but I haven't flicked through it yet, so I wouldn't know if there is anything not quite right about the Kindle presentation.)

The theme of this book is that people are stupid, incompetent, and incapable of making rational decisions. The au. says that this book is not written to help you achieve happiness. This is true. If the au. is correct, you are not going to get any except, evidently, through dumb luck. If you want to know how to be happy, try other books.

The general idea of this book is interesting, and I'm sure would make a good book, if the author could manage to put aside his frequent attempts to be funny. I made it about eleven pages into this book - twice. I stopped reading at the same place both times. "Phineas Gage was a foreman for the Rutland Railroad who, on a lovely autumn day in 1848, ignited a small explosion in the vicinity of his feet, launching a three-and-a-half-foot long iron rod into the air, which Phineas cleverly caught with his face." Is that Gilbert's idea of clever? Because his writing sure isn't. The eleven pages I read are riddled with this crappy, juvenile humor.

Based on this book's title and a cursory glance at some reviews, I figured that this is probably just another book on happiness, but I decided to read it anyway since the ratings are generally pretty good, credible people have endorsed it, and the topic is important. I'm pleased to report that the book far exceeded my expectations and represents an important and original contribution to this genre. Despite having read quite a few books over the years, including several good ones on happiness, I learned a lot of new and useful things from this book.In fact, this book is so packed with insights that I'll need to carefully go through it again (which I look forward to). Some readers may feel that the book goes into too many topics which are tangential to the main argument, but I personally very much appreciated the way Gilbert builds his case systematically and thoroughly, providing us with a wide array of intellectual fringe benefits in the process. Indeed, while the focus of the book is on happiness, the scope of the book is actually much broader than just happiness.The content of the book is mostly drawn from experimental psychology (the good kind), and Gilbert describes many experiments in just the right amount of detail. I sometimes felt that he neglected plausible alternative interpretations of the experimental results, but I see this as a relatively minor issue. The earlier parts of the book also mixed in some Western philosophy, which I thought was a nice touch. And the many quotes from Shakespeare were also apropo since, after all, Shakespeare just about single-handedly encapsulated the full spectrum of human experience and behavior into his body of work!Given the book's rich content, it's hard to summarize this book, but I would say that the (greatly oversimplified) main idea is that both our memory and imagination are inherently faulty, which often causes us to choose suboptimally when it comes to decisions which affect our future happiness. We can partly get around that problem by querying people who are currently having the experience we're considering having, but that approach doesn't always work, plus we're inherently resistant to taking that approach anyway. However, again, this is just an oversimplification, and you really need to read this book in its entirety.Regarding Gilbert's writing style, I think he's quite clear and easy to follow, and he also employs humor throughout the book. To be honest, I initially found his humor superfluous and a bit annoying, but I gradually came to appreciate it, since it lightens the book's atmosphere and thereby helps to sustain the reader's stamina.Overall, this is a superb book and I highly recommend it if you want to be happier, or even if you're just interested in what makes people tick. Five stars don't even begin to do justice to this book.

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