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Stumbling on Happiness

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company-hcuk customername-UK imprint-Harper Perennial isbnbc-9780007183135 isbned-9780007330683 l1-Books l2-Economics l2-Health l2-Mathematics and Science l2-Medicine l2-Non Fiction l2-Self-Improvement & Colouring Books l2-Society and Social Science none productcode-JMAP productcode-JMH productcode-JMQ productcode-JMS productcode-KCA productcode-KCK productcode-MFKH productcode-PSAN5 productcode-QDTM productcode-VSP productpubdategroup-published social;human nature;behavioural;philosophy source-feed subtype-normal version-5.0 wk-stumbling-on-happiness-daniel-gilbert
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  • Description

In this fascinating and often hilarious work – winner of the Royal Society of Science Prize 2007 – pre-eminent psychologist Daniel Gilbert shows how – and why – the majority of us have no idea how to make ourselves happy.

We all want to be happy, but do we know how? When it comes to improving tomorrow at the expense of today, we're terrible at predicting how to please our future selves.

In ‘Stumbling on Happiness’ Professor Daniel Gilbert combines psychology, neuroscience, economics and philosophy with irrepressible wit to describe how the human brain imagines its future – and how well (or badly) it predicts what it will enjoy. Revealing some of the amazing secrets of human motivation, he also answers thought-provoking questions – why do dining companions order different meals instead of getting what they want? Why are shoppers happier when they can't get refunds? And why are couples less satisfied after having children while insisting that their kids are a source of joy?