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Happiness by Design: Finding Pleasure and Purpose in Everyday Life by [Dolan, Paul]
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Happiness by Design: Finding Pleasure and Purpose in Everyday Life Kindle Edition

4.0 out of 5 stars 136 customer reviews

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Length: 256 pages Word Wise: Enabled Enhanced Typesetting: Enabled
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Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 3116 KB
  • Print Length: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Allen Lane (28 Aug. 2014)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B00JJA5DTA
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
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  • Word Wise: Enabled
  • Enhanced Typesetting: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars 136 customer reviews
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #67,281 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Customer Reviews

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Format: Kindle Edition Verified Purchase
This book has two main parts. The first part defines happiness and says what the current thinking is about it. It's by no means the first book to describe the ingredients of happiness but the emphasis on purpose is an interesting idea. We are all aware of the psychological bias we have towards current versus future pleasure (e.g. having some cake now, before we start our diet). The author highlights another bias which is that we wrongly assume that simple pleasures such as watching TV will make us happier than purposeful activities such as work. It's a useful perspective.

The second part offers some advice about how to put these ideas into practice. Unfortunately (for the reader!) the author has a successful career, a well-balanced life and is naturally a very happy and active person. If you have real problems, many of the ideas will comes across as trivial and patronising, such as "spend more time with people you like", "improve your commute", "spend less time on the internet" and "stop procrastinating". He even goes into his own experiences of owning a high-powered sports car and bodybuilding. Anyone lonely, jobless or ill is liable to be thoroughly depressed by the time they get to the end of that lot!

Further thoughts:
Well, at least the book got me thinking, but I suspect that the effect of making tweaks to one's life is likely to be short-lived. I recall an experiment in which office workers' morale improved when their lighting was changed... up or down! Of course the morale boost wore off quickly and was likely caused by the novelty factor plus the feeling that someone cared about their wellbeing.
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Format: Paperback
Happiness is a very tricky subject. Part of the motivation of picking this book off the shelf at the Welcome Institute was to see how someone ostensibly credible would define it. In Thinking Fast and Slow, Daniel Kahneman showed that asking the same questions only in a different order can make people report entirely different levels of happiness. But there I’ve done it: I’ve slipped into the trap of equating reports of how happy a person you think you are overall with how you actually feel right now. As a result I can’t say what I wanted to say. I wanted to say this book made me feel happy when I’d finished reading it – happy that I wouldn’t have to read any more of the drivel in it. But it was just relief, not happiness. In fact I was left less happy. I am confused as to how Dolan ever got to be a professor, how this book got through the editors at Penguin, and why some people seem to think there is some value in having read it.
Dolan draws upon 28 pages of references but – quite the opposite of Kahneman – fails totally to build any kind of story from all of this research. His points are vague, half-baked, baffling, confused and completely unconvincing. Disappointingly he not only fails to clarify what happiness is and how you might measure it let alone maximise it, but half the time talks about things which are not obviously happiness at all. There’s a load of stuff about being more efficient at work, avoiding procrastination etc without this being tied back to the title of the book.
Despite his elevated academic status Dolan is also very suspect in his scientific accuracy. As an extreme example, early on he says you would not notice a doubling of sound from 50 to 100 decibels. In fact 100 decibels is not twice as loud 50; it’s actually ten thousand times.
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Format: Hardcover Vine Customer Review of Free Product ( What's this? )
The subject matter of this book is really intriguing - in an era where everyone constantly seems to be striving for happiness, this offers the tantalising prospect of how you can achieve it.

And I can imagine some people really enjoying this book. To do so, though, requires you to be fairly analytical in nature and happy to wade through a lot of chaff to find the wheat.

The likes of Dan Ariely, Malcolm Gladwell and Daniel Kahneman (who the author has worked with and who supplies a cover quote) have made psychology 'cool' in recent years, without necessarily dumbing down or ignoring the science bit.

And there's no way you could accuse Paul Dolan of dumbing down. Far from it.

And this is the book's main failing. It is so overloaded with science and data that it's far too tough going.

Added to that, the writing style is simply not engaging enough to propel this into top-seller status.

I'm sure Paul Dolan is a first-class scientist and I possibly don't have the intellectual rigour to truly do this material justice, but he's not a compelling enough writer which is why I can't rate the book any higher.
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Format: Hardcover
This is a happiness book like you've never seen one before.

Most books in this canon will ask you to re-train your brain. However, brain training for happiness is an incredibly difficult task and takes year of work - everyone from Buddhist monks to frazzled city-workers to melancholic meaning-seekers struggles with it. This is because we're essentially hardwired to freak out (it's evolutionary - our natural tendency to focus on the negative used to keep us alive when threats loomed around every cave corner) and the skill and effort needed to re-set our Palaeolithic programming should not be underestimated.

This book blazes a new trail by showing us that there is a new way to wellbeing. Dolan empowers us with a strategy for achieving happiness that does not require us to overcome the deeply ingrained thinking patterns that evolution has left us with, but rather one that shows us how to work with them and to use them to our advantage.

Given that most of our feelings, thoughts and behaviours are automatic reactions to stimuli that we process unconsciously, Dolan shows us that we can actually design our environment so that the feelings, thoughts and behaviours that are most conducive to happiness are systematically and continually triggered, independent of any need for brain training or active "thought management". By optimally designing our physical and social contexts, we can relax the effortful happiness-seeking remit of the conscious mind, safe in the knowledge that our unconscious brain will be bouncing off the types of stimuli and sensations that science has proven will make us feel good.
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