This book helps to overcome the outdated economists' way of thinking that postulates 'More is Better than Less.' The authors do that in a substantial way, showing alternatives to this materialistic view, making their book a fascinating experience to read. -- Bruno S. Frey, Senior Professor of Political Economy, Zeppelin University, Germany; author of Happiness: A Revolution in Economics The authors have done a superb job of providing an authoritative review of the most fundamental issues in happiness research to date. Measuring Happiness is a fascinating book for anyone interested in human well-being and happiness and is essential reading for doctoral students and researchers wishing to take the field of happiness economics into the future. -- Yannis Georgellis, Professor of Management, Kent Business School, University of Kent, UK The novelty of this book is not just in its clever and compelling way of arguing that 'money does buy happiness'; it is the idea that our reference points change when we measure happiness over time. -- Ruud Muffels, Professor of Socio-Economics, Tilburg University, the Netherlands
Joachim Weimann is Full Professor of Economic Policy at
Otto-von-Guericke-Universit t Magdeburg, and head of MaXlLab, the
Magdeburg Laboratory for Experimental Economics.
Andreas Knabe is Full Professor and Chair of Public Economics at
Otto-von-Guericke-Univers t Magdeburg.
Ronnie Sch b is Full Professor of International Public Economies at
the School of Business and Economics at Freie Universit t in
Berlin.
Strikes a great balance between the popular and the scientific. It explains a great number of scientific studies very clearly so as to make happiness research extremely accessible to, and enjoyable for, non-economists. For the more scientifically minded, it contains an appendix with an expansion of all the hard-core data. This means that the book reaches a wide audience, from philosophers, for whom it adds an empirical perspective on happiness, to the educated general public interested in the connection between money and happiness, to students in economics, philosophy, sociology, and psychology. The authors also find middle ground between objectively presenting the facts and making a case for their interpretation of them. This does not at any point seem forced, which speaks to the persuasiveness of their arguments. It is quite a feat to present, summarize, and synthesize so many different studies in happiness research and all their diverging, conflicting conclusions, and have the result read like a coherent narrative about money and happiness with a good plot rather than as an over- whelming number of facts. All in all, this is a clearly organized and well-written book that addresses the relationship between money and happiness. Its major strengths are its accessibility, its thorough presentation of the findings of happiness research, and its critical examination of the value and limitations of this research. Measuring Happiness makes you appreciate both how valuable and how limited happiness research really is.—Journal of Happiness Studies
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