humans-aren-t-designed-to-be-happy
Because even when all our material and biological needs are satisfied, a state of sustained happiness will still remain a theoretical and elusive goal, as Abd-al-Rahman III, Caliph of Córdoba in the tenth century, discovered. He was one of the most powerful men of his time, who enjoyed military and cultural achievements, as well as the earthly pleasures of his two harems. Towards the end of his life, however, he decided to count the exact number of days during which he had felt happy. They amounted to precisely 14.Happiness, as the Brazilian poet Vinicius de Moraes put it, is “like a feather flying in the air. It flies light, but not for very long.” Happiness is a human construct, an abstract idea with no equivalent in actual human experience. Positive and negative affects do reside in the brain, but sustained happiness has no biological basis. And – perhaps surprisingly – I reckon this is something to be happy about.
Não há felicidade! Há momentos felizes que duram mais ou menos tempo, in my humble opinion.
ReplyDeleteO Kant dizia que se a natureza nos tivesse construídos para sermos felizes não nos tinha dado a capacidade de razão, só os instintos.
ReplyDeleteApoiado!
ReplyDeleteMas o Kant enganava-se às vezes...
ReplyDelete