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The Happiness Hypothesis  By  cover art

The Happiness Hypothesis

By: Jonathan Haidt
Narrated by: Ryan Vincent Anderson
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Publisher's summary

Jonathan Haidt skillfully combines two genres—philosophical wisdom and scientific research—delighting the listener with surprising insights. He explains, for example, why we have such difficulty controlling ourselves and sticking to our plans; why no achievement brings lasting happiness, yet a few changes in your life can have profound effects, and why even confirmed atheists experience spiritual elevation. In a stunning final chapter, Haidt addresses the grand question "How can I live a meaningful life?," offering an original answer that draws on the rich inspiration of both philosophy and science.

"The Happiness Hypothesis is a wonderful and nuanced book that provides deep insight into the some of the most important questions in life—Why are we here? What kind of life should we lead? What paths lead to happiness? From the ancient philosophers to cutting edge scientists, Haidt weaves a tapestry of the best and the brightest. His highly original work on elevation and awe—two long-neglected emotions—adds a new weave to that tapestry. A truly inspiring book."—David M. Buss, author of The Evolution of Desire: Strategies of Human Mating

"In this beautifully written book, Jonathan Haidt shows us the deep connection that exists between cutting-edge psychological research and the wisdom of the ancients. It is inspiring to see how much modern psychology informs life's most central and persistent questions"—Barry Schwartz, author ofThe Paradox of Choice: Why More Is Less

"In our quest for happiness, we must find a balance between modern science and ancient wisdom, between East and West, and between "left brain" and "right brain." Haidt has struck that balance perfectly, and in doing so has given us the most brilliant and lucid analysis of virtue and well-being in the entire literature of positive psychology. For the reader who seeks to understand happiness, my advice is: Begin with Haidt."—Martin E.P. Seligman, Director, Positive Psychology Center at the University of Pennsylvania and author of Authentic Happiness

"Haidt is a fine guide on this journey between past and present, discussing the current complexities of psychological theory with clarity and humor. . . Haidt's is an open-minded, robust look at philosophy, psychological fact and spiritual mystery, of scientific rationalism and the unknowable ephemeral—an honest inquiry that concludes that the best life is, perhaps, one lived in the balance of opposites."—Bookpage

PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying PDF will be available in your Audible Library along with the audio.

©2006 Jonathan Haidt (P)2018 Hachette Audio

Critic reviews

"I really can't recommend this book enough. It's one of the best and most insightful books I've ever read."—Joe Rogan

"[T]he psychologist Jonathan Haidt shows in his wonderfully smart and readable The Happiness Hypothesis: Finding Modern Truth in Ancient Wisdom [that] modern science and history have a lot to say to each other."—Darrin McMahon, The Washington Post

"[An] inspiring nuanced study."—People

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What listeners say about The Happiness Hypothesis

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The origins of "The Righteous Mind"

I first read Haidt's "The Righteous Mind" and so this book goes over much of what he goes into further detail in that book. Given this, I think this book is likely an easier beginning to the ideas more developed in "The Righteous Mind." Overall fascinating ideas, and it's exciting to see the current and ongoing development(s) between science and religion. This book is a taster of Haidt and other moral psychological insights, and then his later book is a home run, in a sense. After reading both this and his other book I no longer really viewed things in what I now perceive to be a weird 'religious' vs. 'secular' mindset. I now think of almost all human group activity in a wider range, so that any radical group behavior, secular or religious, takes on the term 'fundamentalist' or 'radical,' among other useful ways of viewing the problems and limits in any perspective (and specifically the very heated US political Republican vs. Democrat positions). I now find myself in a spot in which I am pretty moderate with a libertarian flare, without agreeing fully with a lot of various policy issues (more so thinking that living personally in a libertarian manner promotes more self-respect and choice, but understanding that many libertarian policies may in actuality just be bad... this gets into Haidt's great distinction between useful and often correct personal intuitions in interpersonal relations but that on the scale of policy trusting intuitions is often terrible and has bad results).

In short: read or listen to this book and Haidt's following book, "The Righteous Mind," and (hopefully) expand your mind and worldview a bit further beyond limited partisanship and tribalism.

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82 people found this helpful

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Thorough and easy to follow concepts

Very insightful and well presented ..definitely increased my awareness of links between ideologies I once considered in isolation

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7 people found this helpful

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Narration is imperative

While I am enjoying the concepts of this book, the narration is awful. He’s articulate and very easy to understand, however the cadence of the narration becomes almost monotone. Think of it like this: “Ta da duh da duh da, ta da duh da duh dee; Ta da duh da duh da, Ta da duh da duh do. And so on and so on and so on. It helped to speed it up a tad but it’s still hard to listen to more than an hour at a time. I’m halfway done and so far the content is interesting. Does anyone do test narration and present it to a panel for consideration beforehand?

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really happy with this book, very well written

overall extremely happy with this book, few rough areas but great with a subject matter like this it's expected. highly recommend!

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‏‏great book from a great writer

this writer understand many aspects social science combines it which recent studies in psychology and his own unique understanding morality so it gives us a very nice touch on old questions

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Interesting, Insightful, and Wonderful

If every person could think more like this, even just a bit, the world would be a better place.

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Forever thankful

I loved every aspect of this reading. I found myself finding every moment possible to listen. Narration was entertaining.

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Easily the best book I listened this year

there is so much knowledge in here this could have been two separate books. I will listen ti this again to make sure the information is correctly processed in my mind. Very insightful

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An interesting view on Life...

it's a book that gives you a different view about life, but only in reference to other already existing views about life. it's an analytical journey that breaks down a collection of different cultural views on what makes them happy. The book references special occurrences in nature that fit the narrative of the theme but doesn't dive deeper into the perspective of the society or theme of the topic that it references. I felt as if each explanation of the lessons only scratches the surface of the subject material it borrows from, and then proceeds to draw conclusions based on theory or stereotype. As entertaining as it was the ultimate lesson turns out to be as flat as simply being aware of the environmental conditions that shape your happiness, because happiness is relative. Not a bad book overall.

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Incredible

My favorite book so far, it’s so simple yet enlightening. This is a book I would read at least once a year

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