Well - someone e-mailed me this very article today. I had skipped over it even though the NYTs is my homepage.
The article is interesting to me but only half as interesting as the way it surfaced in my life. When Gilbert's book
Stumbling on Happiness came out, I read several reviews and decided that it was not for me and that I did not agree with his premise. I cannot remember what about it I disagreed because today when I looked Gilbert up and read about his book again I saw that I my thoughts about the mind and happiness are very much in line with his work.
Thank you for posting the article Dr. Grossman.
Here is a link and two excerpts from an interview with Gilbert. I really love the points he makes here:
http://www.shambhalasun.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=3027&Itemid=247A few hundred years ago, Sir Francis Bacon wrote quite articulately about how we find evidence to confirm our view. It’s a fundamental truth about the human mind. We have beliefs, ideas, and perceptions, and the brain gets to work very quickly trying to find evidence to substantiate them.
we’ve just done a study that shows that when people are offered the opportunity to do something selfish or something altruistic, they take the selfish option by and large. Culture has told them this is what they should do to be happy, but if you force them to take the altruistic option, they’re much happier. It’s a case of people not really knowing what will make them happy, not knowing what’s good for them. Altruism is a thing you might resist kicking and screaming—“I want to keep my money; I don’t want to give it away”—but if you give it away, it will probably make you happier than most of the things you could spend it on.