It’s rare that scientific journals explicitly engage philosophical conundrums, but a paper in this week’s Science
magazine begins with the question: “Why do people so often make
decisions that their future selves regret?” At age 18, that
skull-and-crossbones tattoo seems like an unimpeachably cool idea; at
28, it’s mortifying. You meet the man of your dreams at 25 — except that
your dreams have become so different by 35 that you end up divorced.
“Even at 68, people think, Ugh, I’m not the person I was at 58, but I’m sure I’ll be this way at 78,” says one of the Science study authors, Daniel Gilbert, a professor of psychology at Harvard University and author of the book Stumbling on Happiness.
No comments:
Post a Comment