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Modern-day Happiness

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  • Modern-day Happiness

    An article in the November issue in Scientific American reports the results of a worldwide happiness survey from the early '90s. Of course, being well taken cared for financially makes people happy, but only up to a point. People just want their basic needs met. They also want stability. The states that were a part of the USSR aren't very happy because that region is in a little turmoil. And democracy, as much as proponents brag about it, isn't by itsef a measure of happiness. Far more important are basic economic needs and security, regardless of society.

    I thought it interesting to share this so it could refine the "happiness algorithm" ie the calculation of happy, productive people and unhappy rebellious people in a faction.
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  • #2
    Thanks for mentioning the article, Jmaster. Sounds very interesting. I'm certainly going to check it out for potential usefulness in Clash of Civs.
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    • #3
      Thanks for the hint! Could you perhaps post the full coverage if you have the magazine as the online version isn't free of charge?

      Mark,

      I guess you're lurking quite much around here for ideas for use in Clash.
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      • #4
        Calculus of Happiness
        ASSESSING SUBJECTIVE WELL-BEING ACROSS SOCIETIES BY RODGER DOYLE

        Research beginning in the 1960s has found that among the correlates of happiness across societies are security, gender equality, absence of class inequity, modernity and low militarization. One of the most recent and extensive efforts to explore these links was conducted by political scientists Ronald F. Inglehart of the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor and Hans-Dieter Klingemann of the Social Science Research Center in Berlin. Through personal interviews in which tens of thousands were questioned, they assessed subjective well-being in 64 countries during the 1990s. Their measure of wellbeing is based on answers to two questions: "How satisfied are you with your life as a whole?" and "Taking all things together, would you say that you are very happy, quite happy, not very happy, not at all happy?" The answers are given equal weight in the subjective well-being scores displayed on the map.
        The scores show a correlation between subjective well-being and economic development. Above about $13,000 of gross domestic product per capita, however-roughly half the American level-additional income does not seem to enhance reported well-being.
        There is a correlation between subjective well-being and democracy. As Inglehart and Klingemann point out, however, democracy does not always make people happy. As examples, they cite Weimar Germany and the former communist countries. In fact, the extraordinarily low level in most ex-communist countries apparently reflects not so much low income as the turmoil following the dissolution of the Soviet empire. The evidence suggests that well-being in these countries was considerably higher before the dissolution.
        Inglehart and Klingemann theorize that although democracy contributes to happiness, the primary causal effect is in the other direction: high levels of well-being legitimize democracy and promote its survival. Lack of
        democracy does not necessarily lead to unhappiness, as is demonstrated by authoritarian China, which has a higher level of well-being than democracies such as India or South Africa, perhaps because of its rapid economic growth.
        Particular religious traditions may playa role just as important as economic development. This proposition is suggested by the higher level of well-being in the historically Protestant cultures of Scandinavia as compared with Catholic countries such as Italy and Spain. Western countries as a group have higher well-being scores than non-Western nations, but to what extent this is influenced by religion is not clear.
        Among the correlates of happiness on an individual level are good health, extraversion, and professional or managerial occupation. The divorced and widowed are less happy than the never married, who in turn are less happy than the married. Old and young are equally happy. To judge by the experience of Holocaust survivors, early trauma leads to later unhappiness. Contrary to what some pessimists believe, most people almost everywhere who live above a bare subsistence level are happy.
        Good stuff here.
        I was going to provide the article as it appeared as a rtf file, but even compressed it was too big.
        Attached Files
        It has yet to be proven that intelligence has any survival value --Arthur C. Clarke

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        • #5
          the netherlands comes on second place.........but anyways.....this would make new tactics availible and also some new units and abilities......causing unrest in one base/city of a faction will cause (some) unrest in the other bases with in turn will cause even more unrest etcetc..... probing
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          • #6
            That's why Civ2 has Democratic government lapsing into anarchy if one city remains in unrest for more than two turns in a row. That is a little extreme, but it's an example.
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