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Technology
Technology
and Happiness
by
Allan Levite
Allan
Levite is a freelance writer residing in San Francisco, California.
[published
in The Freeman: Ideas on Liberty, August, 1998, p.
454]
While
surfing the Internet one day, I chanced upon an article by
Jay Hanson, titled "The Woes of Modern Society."1 In most
respects it was standard environmentalist fare, bemoaning
modern technology and the harm it has allegedly done to the
earth and to humanity. Other writers have already dealt at
length with the exaggerations and misstatements of the "green"
movement,2 but Hanson has touched on a more philosophic issue
that I want to address specifically-namely, the relationship
between technology, affluence, and human happiness.
Technology
and consumerism, he declares, have not brought greater happiness
to humanity, as most people had previously believed they would.
"Instead of richer and happier," he claims, "we see that traditional
economic development has actually made us poorer and un-happier.
Indeed, history has shown us (very forcefully) that the pursuit
of traditional economic development is actually the pursuit
of un-happiness."
An
Old Story
Today's
green movement, in some respects, is a new force in political
philosophy. But before we begin to think that Hanson's anti-materialistic
diatribe constitutes a new argument, we should stop to consider
that few ideas have been more often encountered in literature
than the notion that acquiring material possessions results
in waste, greed, envy, and violence. Boredom with affluence,
or the actual rejection of it, did not even begin with the
hippie movement of the mid-1960s. Literary attacks on "luxury"
incessantly appeared during the increasingly affluent late
1700s, coming from such well-known writers as Smollett, Pope,
Swift, Rousseau, and Bolingbroke.3
To this
day, it is difficult to enter a bookstore without seeing yet
another book from a major publisher that presents similar
arguments all over again, to the accompaniment of pomp and
fanfare. In 1993 alone, not counting the anti-growth primers
by environmentalists, three books from major publishers trumpeted
the same set of assumptions-that competition and the pursuit
of material goods are destructive, and that mankind's urge
to consume is wasteful, vulgar, and self-defeating: Land
of Desire by William Leach, Fool's Gold by Andrew
Schmookler, and Punished by Rewards by Alfie Kohn.
The year 1994 checked in with A Nation of Salesmen: The
Tyranny of the Market and the Subversion of Culture
by Earl Shorris. Going back to 1989 we find The Hunger
for More: Searching for Values in An Age of Greed by Lawrence
Shames and The Poverty of Affluence by Paul Wachtel-which,
however, was issued by a minor publisher.
One thing
to bear in mind is that the anti-materialistic theme seems
to be the national [p. 455] anthem of writers, intellectuals,
and debonair socialites, which suggests that the social guilt
so typically experienced by these all-too-comfortable individuals
is not unrelated to the philosophy itself. We rarely hear
complaints about "excess consumption" coming from those who
cannot afford luxuries, but rather from those who are jaded
by them. George Lichtheim, in his not unsympathetic history
of socialism, made a similar observation, but more bluntly,
when he wrote that there is no need to waste time on the demand
that the consumer society be abolished. "This kind of talk,"
according to Lichtheim, "commonly issues from people who do
not have to work for a living."4
Contentment's
Table of Contents
To bolster
his argument that technological development and increased
production have not increased the happiness of mankind as
a whole, Hanson cites regular surveys by the University of
Chicago's National Opinion Research Center, which have indicated
that the number of Americans who claim to be "very happy"
(around a third of the population) is no greater now than
it was in 1957, despite the fact that the gross national product
and personal consumption expenditures per capita have nearly
doubled since then.
But Hanson
has responded to the wrong question with the wrong answer.
First of all, it is fairly impressive that an entire third
of the population considers itself not merely happy, but "very"
happy, and perhaps this indicator has not increased because
it is already as high as it can go. As he pointed out himself,
the main determinants of happiness are unrelated to consumption,
consisting of such things as satisfaction with family life
(especially marriage), satisfaction with work, and leisure
to develop talents and friendships. This hardly constitutes
an argument that industrialism and affluence do not guarantee
happiness, because happiness is such a subjective, personal,
and fragile condition that any number of things can jeopardize
it, and nothing can possibly guarantee it.
Hanson's
problem is that he confuses satisfaction, which results from
specific acts or situations, with overall, general contentment.
His argument against technological development along these
lines is comparable to saying that baseball fans will never
be truly happy unless their team wins the World Series every
year. In a sense that might be true, at least for the most
rabid partisans of their respective teams, but it hardly proves
that the fans do not enjoy going to the stadium to watch games
being played, or that this pastime is unimportant to them.
In claiming
that technology and affluence do not prevent unhappiness,
Hanson might just as well have said that if a person lives
long enough, he or she will almost certainly experience the
death of both parents, perhaps some other relatives as well,
and perhaps even some close friends. Whether we speak of this
occurring during the Dark Ages or today, such personal tragedies
produce grief and unhappiness, so happiness will always be
something that has definite limits. No matter what state current
technology has reached, the transitory existence of happiness
is likely to be interrupted by episodes of grief and loss.
(Thomas Jefferson was astute enough, when writing the Declaration
of Independence, to speak of the pursuit of happiness, not
its attainment, which he realized was rare and fleeting.)
Therefore,
Hanson would be right if he claimed that material possessions
cannot substitute for family pleasures, and that riches cannot
compensate for the loss of loved ones. But this is not their
purpose. Technology does not exist to affect human happiness
in the overall sense, but to increase specific satisfactions.
Satisfaction and happiness are not the same thing, nor does
one necessarily follow from the other. Technology may or may
not increase overall happiness, but it can make specific tasks
easier so that individuals can do more, make more things,
and-yes-have more things.
To
Do Is Better than to Make Do
Since
Hanson's article appeared on the Internet, it is safe to assume
that he composed it on a computer equipped with word-processing
[p. 456] software. Using the technology of thirty
years ago, he would have had to write it on a typewriter.
Since writers tend to make corrections to their work (the
real secret of good writing is rewriting), this would have
taken much longer, robbing him of leisure time. Using the
technology of Jefferson's era, Hanson would have had to write
with a quill pen and an inkpot, robbing himself of even more
leisure time-which, as he points out, is one of the main components
of happiness. This is not to say that he is a hypocrite, but
only to point out that his anti-technological perspective
blinds him from seeing how beneficial technology has been,
even to him, and how it has enabled him to increase his satisfaction.
Even so,
we cannot say that being able to write articles more quickly
and more easily would make a major contribution to a writer's
overall happiness. As Hanson himself pointed out, our sense
of contentment and satisfaction is not a mere function of
what we achieve; it depends on our frame of reference-on how
"what we attain compares to what we expected." Indeed, every
age has its own expectations, and there were certainly happy
people during the pre-technological Dark Ages (such as Robin
Hood and his "Merry Men"), just as there are today.
Friar
Tuck and Will Scarlet would not be unhappy simply because
they did not possess radios, televisions, or sports cars.
They had no conception of such things. Moreover, their band
of outlaws provided them with a network of close friends on
whom they could depend for good humor, camaraderie, and moral
support. But just because they were capable of happiness without
such modern conveniences, it does not mean that they would
have rejected them if they had learned of their existence;
nor does it mean that they would derive no satisfaction from
these devices had they had them. If Robin Hood could warn
Little John of the Sheriff of Nottingham's approach by radio
or telephone, it could result in saving the lives of many
of his Merry Men. It would be hard to imagine him thinking
that such a device was anything but a great boon. And if his
men had been equipped with motorcycles instead of horses.
. . .
To
Live Is to Achieve
Hanson
has implied that mankind could be content with less technology
than it now possesses and less production than it now generates.
But man is an inquisitive and striving animal, who thrives
on challenge. Hanson says that we could be satisfied with
lesser abundance if we lowered our expectations. But the very
fact that people have expectations means there will always
be something that a person wants but does not have, or that
some kind of dissatisfaction will exist because we can never,
in any age, attain all we might expect or hope to attain.
Without this perpetual (and perfectly normal) dissatisfaction
with the present state of affairs, there would have been no
reason for technology to have developed. That's the key element
Hanson has missed. When there is dissatisfaction or an unfulfilled
need, entrepreneurs appear. Their usefulness lies in their
ability to innovate and to offer solutions that people are
willing to buy because these solutions increase specific satisfactions
or reduce some specific dissatisfactions.
Iron is
too brittle, so steel was invented. Horses are slow and litter
the streets with disease-generating droppings, so steam and
then gasoline engines were invented. Telegraphed messages
gave way to telephone calls. Index-card files are cumbersome,
so computers were invented. Thus, the fact that the percentage
of Americans who claim to be very happy is no larger now than
it was decades ago is not a valid argument against technology
and material abundance, which exist to meet specific needs,
not to produce general happiness. One question that the polltakers
mentioned by Hanson apparently did not ask, but perhaps should
have asked (at least, for Hanson's own enlightenment) is:
"Would you be happier or sadder if you had to live without
modern conveniences?"
Technology
and Leisure
Since
Hanson was careful to point out that satisfaction with family
life (especially marriage) is a key component of happiness,
those of us who support technological growth [p. 457]
should also be careful to point out the beneficial role that
technology has played in preserving this happiness. Before
modern technology arrived, a woman would typically have eight
or ten children, for two reasons: first, so that two or three
of them, with luck, would actually survive past childhood;
second, because no effective birth-control method existed.
Progress in medicine and disease-prevention-made possible
by technological advancements-changed all this. Technology
also made mom's life easier by producing dishwashers, vacuum
cleaners, clothes washers and dryers, microwave ovens, and
many other household gadgets. If these things did not necessarily
ensure her happiness, they at least did not make her any sadder.
In fact, since Hanson clearly states that leisure time is
a prime component of happiness, we can assume that by his
own definition, such labor-saving devices must have made mom
happier.
Similarly,
the unhappiness a husband would experience from watching his
wife die in childbirth is a less-frequent occurrence now because
of technological and medical advances. The same can be said
for the death of a parent, which is now delayed by many years
due to the same scientific attainments. Perhaps losing relatives
to fire is even more terrifying and grief-generating than
losing them to natural causes. Before technology gave us electric
lighting, house fires were a constant danger because at first
interiors were lit with candles and then by oil or kerosene
lamps, which were always fire hazards. History books do not
tell us that half of Chicago was burned to a crisp in 1871,
with great loss of life, because Mrs. O'Leary's cow kicked
an electric light bulb out of its socket.
Discovery
Is Destiny
Hanson
is probably aware of such facts, but his perspective drives
him to reject production and technology because happiness,
he claims, does not consist of "having." But he should ask
himself if any happiness is derived from knowing, or if ignorance
is bliss instead. The human species is a curious one, always
asking questions, wondering "why," and speculating about the
unknown. Consequently, science developed and made slow progress,
and from it grew the technology that Hanson so deplores. Do
not scientists, inventors, and philosophers obtain happiness
from gaining knowledge and making discoveries? Are not others
made happier when they hear that this has occurred, and that
mankind's knowledge and understanding of the universe have
been increased? Certainly this is so. We will probably never
understand the universe completely, but each step in that
direction is a triumph that all can share. It may not make
a sad person happy, but mankind does not pursue knowledge
to make sad people happy. The pursuit of knowledge is itself
a source of satisfaction, if not of happiness, and that is
sufficient.
Hanson's
chief error is to ascribe to technology and affluence an exclusive
moral responsibility for producing general happiness that
they simply do not bear. To draw a parallel, suppose a cultural
Philistine had examined the same opinion polls that Hanson
had seen, and concluded that even though the world possesses
many more books and works of art now than it did fifty or
a hundred years ago, people are neither more happy nor more
aesthetically advanced now than they were then. So it must
have been art and literature that have failed us! Should this
inspire us to say that writers, playwrights, and artists should
restrict their output?
Hanson
should restrict his efforts to cultivating his own happiness,
and stop trying to decide-based on mere circumstantial evidence-what
makes others happy. As implied by the old adage, "What is
one man's meat is another man's poison," this is for each
individual to decide.
Notes
1. Web
address: [link no longer works]. (Accessed March 6,
1998.)
2. I particularly
recommend Eco-Sanity by Joseph L. Bast, et al. (Lanham,
Md.: Madison Books, 1994) (Click for link to Heartland Institute);
Environmental Overkill: Whatever Happened to Common Sense?
by Dixy Lee Ray (New York: Harper Perennial, 1993); Green
Delusions by Martin W. Lewis (Durham, N.C.: Duke University
Press, 1992); No Turning Back by Wallace Kaufman (New
York: Basic Books, 1994); and Science Under Siege by
Michael Fumento (New York: William Morrow & Co., Inc.,
1993).
3. Albert
O. Hirschman, Shifting Involvements (Princeton, N.J.:
Princeton University Press, 1982), pp. 50&endash;53.
4. George
Lichtheim, A Short History of Socialism (New York:
Praeger Publishers, 1970), p. 327.
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