Warrigal
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- Location
- Sydney, Australia
This is not intended to be a political discussion. It is about the enhancement of happiness in the population.
A new index of happiness has just been published
The top 25 countries on the scale are
The full report, including how the index is compiled can be found here http://worldhappiness.report/
and the rankings are here Chapter 2: http://worldhappiness.report/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2016/03/HR-V1Ch2_web.pdf
Chapter 3 of the report deals with Promoting Secular Ethics and I found this chapter very interesting.
Here is a sample
It raises interesting questions - should ethical codes be concerned with happiness as well as principles of fairness and justice? Can religious morals and ethical principles overlap? Is Jefferson onto something when he says that The care of human life and happiness … is the only legitimate object of good government" ?
What do you think?
PS Ralphy - this serious topic is in the general section rather than Speakers' Corner. Please wait awhile before sending it off the rails.
A new index of happiness has just been published
The top 25 countries on the scale are
1. Denmark (7.526)
2. Switzerland (7.509)
3. Iceland (7.501)
4. Norway (7.498)
5. Finland (7.413)
6. Canada (7.404)
7. Netherlands (7.339)
8. New Zealand (7.334)
9. Australia (7.313)
10. Sweden (7.291)
11. Israel (7.267)
12. Austria (7.119)
13. United States (7.104)
14. Costa Rica (7.087)
15. Puerto Rico (7.039)
16. Germany (6.994)
17. Brazil (6.952)
18. Belgium (6.929)
19. Ireland (6.907)
20. Luxembourg (6.871)
21. Mexico (6.778)
22. Singapore (6.739)
23. United Kingdom (6.725)
24. Chile (6.705)
25. Panama (6.701)
2. Switzerland (7.509)
3. Iceland (7.501)
4. Norway (7.498)
5. Finland (7.413)
6. Canada (7.404)
7. Netherlands (7.339)
8. New Zealand (7.334)
9. Australia (7.313)
10. Sweden (7.291)
11. Israel (7.267)
12. Austria (7.119)
13. United States (7.104)
14. Costa Rica (7.087)
15. Puerto Rico (7.039)
16. Germany (6.994)
17. Brazil (6.952)
18. Belgium (6.929)
19. Ireland (6.907)
20. Luxembourg (6.871)
21. Mexico (6.778)
22. Singapore (6.739)
23. United Kingdom (6.725)
24. Chile (6.705)
25. Panama (6.701)
The full report, including how the index is compiled can be found here http://worldhappiness.report/
and the rankings are here Chapter 2: http://worldhappiness.report/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2016/03/HR-V1Ch2_web.pdf
Chapter 3 of the report deals with Promoting Secular Ethics and I found this chapter very interesting.
Here is a sample
The greatest happiness principle
So, first, what ethical idea based on human need can best fill the moral vacuum left by the decline of religious belief? The answer must surely be the great central idea of the 18th century Anglo-Saxon Enlightenment on which much of modern Western civilisation is based.5 This can be expressed in three propositions.
We should assess human progress by the extent to which people are enjoying their
lives—by the prevalence of happiness and, conversely, the absence of misery.
- Therefore, the objective of governments should be to create conditions for the greatest possible happiness and the least possible misery. As Thomas Jefferson put it, “The care of human life and happiness … is the only legitimate object of good government”.6
- Likewise the obligation of each of us is to create the greatest amount of human happiness that we can in the world and the least misery. (Overall happiness of course includes our own.)
- And in all of this it is more important to reduce unhappiness (or misery) than to increase the happiness of those who are already higher up the scale.7
These three propositions are what may be called the “greatest happiness principle”. It was Proposition 1 which inspired many organisations, like the OECD, the EU and many governments, to reassess their answer to the question: what is progress? And it was Propositions 1 and 2 which have mainly inspired the production of successive World Happiness Reports - our hope has been to display enough of the new science of
happiness to enable policy-makers to make happiness a practical goal of policy.8 But it is
Proposition 3 that we wish to promote in this chapter, because we believe it should be the central principle which inspires those billions worldwide for whom religion no longer provides the answer to how we should live.9
The principle is frequently misunderstood.10 For example, it does not assume that people are only concerned about their own happiness. On the contrary, if people only pursued their own happiness, this would not produce a very happy society. Instead the greatest happiness principle exhorts us to care passionately about the happiness of others. It is only if we do so that true progress (as we have defined it) can occur.
But what is so special about happiness? Why not judge our progress by our wealth or our freedom or our health or education, and not just our happiness? Clearly many things are good. But different goods are often in competition. My spending more on health may mean spending less on education. Or wealth-creation may require some limitations on freedom. So we have to ask why different things are good? And in most cases we can give sensible answers. For example ‘Wealth makes people feel good’ or ‘Ill health makes people feel bad.’ But if we ask why it matters how people feel—why happiness is good—we can give no answer. It is just self-evident. So happiness is revealed as the verarching
good, and other goods obtain their goodness from the fact that they contribute to happiness.
And that is why an “impartial spectator” would judge a state of human affairs by the happiness of the people.11
The greatest happiness principle has a universal appeal. It has the capacity to inspire, by mobilising the benevolent part of every human being.
In the language of Jews, Christians and Muslims, it embodies the commandment to Do as you would be done by, and to Love your neighbour as yourself. In the language of Hinduism and Buddhism, it embodies the principle of compassion—that we should in all our dealings truly wish for the happiness of all of those we can affect, and we should cultivate in ourselves an attitude of unconditional benevolence.12
Is there any prospect that we can achieve such a caring way of life? Many people are skeptical. They believe that human nature is inherently selfish and we should just accept that fact. After all, it is the fittest who survive, and those must be the people who put No 1 first. But this crude form of Darwinism is quite contrary to the modern understanding of human nature and of human evolution, since it is the human instinct
to cooperate which has given humans their extraordinary power over most other vertebrate species.13 The fact is that we have two natures, one selfish and one altruistic, and it is the function of our ethical culture to promote the altruist within us over the egotist.
In this context, an ethical system that favours not only others’ happiness but also our own has a much better chance of being implemented than one that is pure hair-shirt. It is therefore a huge advantage of the greatest happiness principle that it requires self-compassion as well as compassion towards others.
It raises interesting questions - should ethical codes be concerned with happiness as well as principles of fairness and justice? Can religious morals and ethical principles overlap? Is Jefferson onto something when he says that The care of human life and happiness … is the only legitimate object of good government" ?
What do you think?
PS Ralphy - this serious topic is in the general section rather than Speakers' Corner. Please wait awhile before sending it off the rails.