A User's Guide to Our Emotional Thermostat (with Adam Mastroianni)

情绪恒温器用户指南(与 Adam Mastroianni 合着)

EconTalk

教育

2024-04-01

1 小时 3 分钟
PDF

单集简介 ...

Can you be too happy? Psychologist Adam Mastroianni talks with EconTalk's Russ Roberts about our emotional control systems, which seem to work at bringing both sadness and happiness back to a steady baseline. Too much happiness is--perhaps surprisingly--not necessarily a good thing. They also explore whether our general level of happiness is really related to events in our lives or connected to something much larger than ourselves.

单集文稿 ...

  • Welcome to Econ talk conversations for the curious part of the Library of economics and Liberty.

  • I'm your host, Russ Roberts of Shalem College in Jerusalem and Stanford University's Hoover Institution.

  • Go to econtalk.org, where you can subscribe, comment on this episode, and find links and other information related to today's conversation.

  • You'll also find our archives with every episode we've done going back to 2006.

  • Our email address is mailcontalk.org dot.

  • We'd love to hear from you.

  • Today is March 6, 2024.

  • My guest is psychologist Adam Astriani.

  • His substack is experimental history.

  • This is Adam's fourth appearance on Econ Talk last year, in October of 2023, talking about learning and forgetting Adam welcome back to Econ Talk.

  • Hey, it's great to be back.

  • Thanks for having me.

  • Our topic for today is your recent essay, you can't be too happy.

  • Literally.

  • That kind of blew my mind a little bit.

  • You start with the fact that in surveys of people's happiness in America over time, recessions, depressions, wars, all kinds of things going on, it's pretty flat.

  • Summarize that.

  • Go a little deeper than that, but it's pretty flat.

  • Yeah.

  • Gallup has been asking people a pretty broad question about happiness from 1948, and every year about the same, you get about the same answers back.