首页
登录
职称英语
[originaltext] (I -- Interviewer; K -- Miles Kimball)I: For almost a year, eco
[originaltext] (I -- Interviewer; K -- Miles Kimball)I: For almost a year, eco
游客
2023-12-08
35
管理
问题
(I -- Interviewer; K -- Miles Kimball)
I: For almost a year, economists at the University of Michigan have been asking Americans about their happiness for the school’s widely quoted monthly measure of consumer confidence. Tonight on our show, we have Miles Kimball, an economics professor at Michigan. He says only results from the first three months have been analyzed so far. We asked him how all this works, language-wise. Good evening, Professor Kimball. I’m so glad to have you here.
K: It’s my pleasure. Thank you for inviting me on the show.
I: Professor Kimball, could you please tell us specifically what you and your research group did?
K: What we did was we added to the survey of consumers the following question: "Now think about the past week and the feelings you’ve experienced. Please tell me if each of the following was true for you much of the time this past week: you were happy; you felt sad; you enjoyed life; you felt depressed." And people are asked to give yes-no answers to each of those four questions. That takes only about forty-five seconds for people to answer that, so it’s quite quick.
I: Why would you want to know the answers to these questions?
K: Well, actually maybe I could explain how this relates to language because I think that answers the question, too. So, in most languages, the word for happiness is related to the word for good luck. And in English, for example, we have the word "happenstance" or this archaic phrase "as happy has it", which are both about luck and things that happen by chance. And so that meaning of happiness ends up meaning something like having a good life or the outcome of good fortune. And it’s important to realize this is a different meaning of happiness than just how you feel. They’re obviously related, and that’s important -- related but different. One of the striking facts ab. out happiness in the sense of how you feel is that it tends to go back to normal pretty fast.
I: And what have you found so far?
K: So we found this in our data after -- in people’s reaction after Hurricane Katrina. So we measured the happiness of people across the country -- so almost none of these people are those who are directly affected by the hurricane, and yet their happiness dipped down for a week or two. And then it came back to normal. So it’s not too surprising that people would react strongly to Katrina. But then that becomes a measuring rod for other things. One of the surprising things we found was that a month later there was almost as strong a dip in happiness after the earthquake in Pakistan. To me this makes sense. You know, you see on TV suffering people and it doesn’t matter if they’re suffering people on the other side of the world or in your own country -- I mean it does matter, but either way you care about them because they’re human beings.
I: Well, let me ask you, there have been a lot of stories recently I’ve noticed about happiness, and studies of happiness, and economists and others seem very interested in this. What’s going on? Why is the interest now in happiness?
K: Well, a lot of the interest is based on these two meanings. Some of the interest is based on something bigger than I think we can actually do. The big thing would be if somehow these two meanings of happiness happen to be equal to one another. So, in other words, if you could go out and ask people how happy they felt and have a measure of how well their life was going overall, that would be very handy and you could do all kinds of things with that. And so, for example, there is an economist in England, Richard Laird, who has written a book on happiness, who proposes to do public policy on that basis. That’s taking things a little bit too far. You can learn a lot from looking at happiness, but in order to learn about what matters to people, you’d actually have to find news events. The trouble you find is that these news effects go away after a while. People adjust to new situations. There’s a name for that, "hedonic adaptation", that the happiness goes back to normal. And the other interesting thing is that the normal level of happiness depends on a lot of things that are not necessarily an overall measure of how well your life is going.
I: Economist Miles Kimball at the University of Michigan hopes to get a three-year grant to continue measuring Americans’ happiness. The current funding lasts through September. OK. It’s time for a short break. We’ll be back in a minute.
选项
A、Happiness means good luck in many languages.
B、Happiness as a kind of feeling is something like having a good life.
C、People’s feeling of happiness goes back to normal, quickly.
D、The English word "happenstance" is about luck that happens by chance.
答案
B
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3255088.html
相关试题推荐
WhichofthefollowingisNOTtrueaccordingtothenews?[originaltext]OnF
[originaltext]Washington(dpa)-AfterthefailuresoftheirpasttwoMarsmis
[originaltext]Washington(dpa)-AfterthefailuresoftheirpasttwoMarsmis
[originaltext]LiHua:Pardonme.I’mtryingtofindarticlesonecology.Canyo
[originaltext]LiHua:Pardonme.I’mtryingtofindarticlesonecology.Canyo
[originaltext]LiHua:Pardonme.I’mtryingtofindarticlesonecology.Canyo
ThomasMalthuspublishedhisEssayonthePrincipleofPopulationalmost200
ThomasMalthuspublishedhisEssayonthePrincipleofPopulationalmost200
ThomasMalthuspublishedhisEssayonthePrincipleofPopulationalmost200
ThomasMalthuspublishedhisEssayonthePrincipleofPopulationalmost200
随机试题
【S1】[br]【S4】most→more本题辨析形容词比较级与最高级的误用。表示“或多或少”这个含义时,or前后的形容词都用比较级,即:moreorl
下列关于事实型信息检索、数据型信息检索和文献型信息检索的说法,错误的是( )。
在集装箱运输中,集装箱的来源包括实际承运人的箱子、无船承运人的箱子、( )、集
在抢险救灾等维护国家利益,公共利益的活动中,受到伤害的,应视同工伤。()
下列描述正确的有A.血清是测定葡萄糖的较好样品 B.生化检验葡萄糖利用免疫法测
资产评估专业人员撰写出资产评估正式报告后,下列说法错误的有( )。A.应当由一
人在每一瞬间,将心理活动选择了某些对象而忽略了另一些对象。这一特点指的是注意的(
在企业财务管理目标理论中,以利润最大化为财务管理目标的缺陷,体现在()。A
关于悬臂拼装说法错误的是( )A.节段的脱模时间应符合设计规定;设计未规定时,应
具有规格尺寸大、花色品种较多、铺设整体效果好、色泽均匀、视觉效果好,表面耐磨性高
最新回复
(
0
)