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    If you charted the incidence of depression since 1950, the lines suggest a growing epidemic. Depending on what assumptions are used, clinical depression is 3 to 10 times as common today than two generations ago. A recent study by Ronald Kessler of Harvard Medical School estimated that each year, 1 in 15 Americans experience an episode of major depression--meaning not just a bad day but depression so debilitating that it’s hard to get out of bed. Money jangles in our wallets and purses as never before, but we are basically no happier for it, and for many, more money leads to depression. How can that be?

    Of course, our grandmothers, many of whom lived through the Depression and the war, told us that money can’t buy happiness. We don’t act as though we listened. Millions of us spend more time and energy pursuing the things money can buy than engaging in activities that create real fulfillment in life, like cultivating friendships, helping others and developing a spiritual sense.

    We say we know that money can’t buy happiness. In the TIME poll, when people were asked about their major source of happiness, money ranked 14th. Still, we behave as though happiness is one wave of a credit card away. Too many Americans view expensive purchases as "shortcuts to well-being," says Martin Seligman, a psychologist at the University of Pennsylvania. But people are poor predictors of where those shortcuts will take them.

    To be sure, there is ample evidence that being poor causes unhappiness. For example, studies by Ruut Veenhoven, a sociologist at Erasmus University in Rotterdam, show that the poor--those in Europe earning less than about $10,000 a year--are rendered unhappy by the relentless frustration and stress of poverty.


【題組】50 What does the phrase "shortcuts to well-being" mean?
(A)A big challenge to get rich.
(B)A fast method to help people.
(C)A quick way to live a happy life.
(D)A difficult route to real fulfillment.


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幫按讚 大四上 (2017/12/15)
片語"shortcuts to well-☆☆☆☆☆"...


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8F
112年已上岸,挑戰極限 博二下 (2021/08/05)

Too many American☆ ☆☆☆☆ ...



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9F
墨夜熠樓 大四上 (2021/09/22)

Americans view expensive purchases as "shortcuts to well-being," says Martin Seligman, a psychologist at the University of Pennsylvania. But people are poor predictors of where those shortcuts will take them.


賓夕法尼亞大學的心理學家馬丁·塞利格曼 (Martin Seligman) 表示,美國人將昂貴的購物視為“通往幸福的捷徑”。 但是人們很難預測這些捷徑會帶他們去哪裡。

10F
皮諾丘 112&1 高一下 (2022/11/03)
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馬丁.賽里格曼(Martin Seligman)是美國心理學家、教育家和作家,被稱為現代正向心理學運動之父

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