10 | What Can Science Tell Us About Happiness? ~ Anna Alexandrova

In this episode, a philosopher of science from Cambridge offers us a cautiously optimistic guide to the science of happiness. Dr Anna Alexandrova, the author of A Philosophy for the Science of Well-being, and Ilari discuss questions such as: What do happiness questionnaires measure? Are rich countries happier than poorer ones? Should the science of happiness measure concepts such as “flourishing”? Or focus on simple questions like “how satisfied are you with your life”? Why psychologists and economists are averse to qualitative measures? When is this a problem? Why are some scholars so pessimistic about the science of happiness? Dr Alexandrova's experience of growing up in the Soviet Union and post-soviet Russia Is Ilari actually from the world’s happiest country? Names mentioned Dan Hayburn (philosopher at St Louis University) Max Weber (sociologist 1864-1920) Polly Mitchell (philosopher at KCL) Thomas Kuhn (philosopher of science, 1922-1966) Johanna Thoma (philosopher at LSE) Naomi Oreskes and Eric Conway (authors of Merchants of Doubt) Mark Fabian (political theorists at Cambridge) Jeffrey Sachs (economist at Columbia University) Terms mentioned Utilitarianism Easterlin paradox World Happiness Report WELLBY (measure adopted by the UK government) “Participatory methods” (in construct validation) Turn To Us (UK-based anti-poverty charity) Get in touch Form: https://on-humans.podcastpage.io/contact Email: makela dot ilari at outlook dot com

Om Podcasten

Conversations with leading scholars about human nature, human condition, and the human journey. From the origins of war to the psychology of love, each topic brings fresh insights into questions such as: Where do we come from? What brings us together? Why do we love? Why do we destroy? Support the show: Patreon.com/OnHumans Articles to read: OnHumans.Substack.com The show is hosted by Ilari Mäkelä, a London-based science communicator with a background in Psychology and Philosophy, both Western (BA, Oxford) and Eastern (MPhil, Peking University).