We find happiness by doing things that have a higher likelihood of insuring our survival, such as eating a great meal. What can we extrapolate from the activities that are best for our survival and or ar evolutionarily advantageous? That's a great question. I think you answer that question well with a lot of advice that you give on your web type. The one piece of advice that i think is missing is it's important to become financially successful in order to gain financial freedom. But at the same time, work is, for almost every human work is a large part of their life. And so if my job is working at a petrol station, well, if i can help people out when
#371: Psychology professor Bill von Hippel explains the evolutionary science behind how we’re hardwired as humans.
We’re wired to be social, to connect, to communicate and cooperate.
We’re wired to want to learn and teach, to build a collective body of knowledge that stretches beyond what any single individual could ever learn in their lifetime.
We’re wired to feel surges of happiness that fade, so that we’re intrinsically motivated to keep repeating behaviors that lead to additional surges of happiness.
Once we understand the evolutionary science behind what makes us happy, Dr. von Hippel explains, we can apply this knowledge to making better decisions for our work, money and lives.
Bill von Hippel is a graduate of Yale University and the University of Michigan. He’s currently a psychology professor at the University of Queensland in Australia. He joins us to share his insights into the history and science of happiness.
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