The Pursuit of Happiness
The right to pursue happiness is promised to Americans by the US Constitution, but no one seems quite sure which way happiness ran. It may be we are issued a hunting license but offered no game. Jonathan Swift conceived of happiness as “the state of being well-deceived” or of being “a fool among idiots,” for Swift saw society as a land of false goals.
It is, of course, un-American to think in terms of false goals. We do, however, seem to be dedicated to the idea of buying our way to happiness. We shall all have made it to Heaven when we possess enough.
And at the same time the forces of American business are hugely dedicated to making US deliberately unhappy. Advertising is one of our major industries, and advertising exists not to satisfy desires but to create them—and to create them faster than anyone’s budget can satisfy them. For that matter, our whole economy is based on addicting US to greed. We are even told it is our patriotic duty to support the national economy by buying things.
Look at any of the magazines that cater to women. There advertising begins as art and slogans in the front pages and ends as pills and therapy in the back pages. The art at the front illustrates the dream of perfect beauty. This is the baby skin that must be hers. This, the perfumed breath she must breathe out. This, the sixteen-year-old figure she must display at forty, at fifty, at sixty, and forever. This is the harness into which Mother must strap herself in order to display that perfect
figure. This is the cream that restores skin, these are the tablets that melt away fat around the thighs, and these are the pills of perpetual youth.
Obviously no reasonable person can be completely persuaded either by such art or by such pills and devices. Yet someone is obviously trying to buy this dream and spending billions every year in the attempt. Clearly the happiness-market is not running out of customers, but what is it they are trying to buy?
Actually, the essence of happiness is in the pursuit itself, in the pursuit of what is engaging and life-changing, which is to say, in the idea of becoming. A nation is not measured by what it possesses or wants to possess, but by what it wants to become.
当幸福来敲门:美国宪法赋予美国人民追求幸福的权利,但是似乎谁也说不清幸福跑到哪里去了。 这就好比我们获得了打猎许可却无猎物可打一样。 乔纳森·斯威夫特认为幸福是 \"一种大上其当而浑然不觉的状态\", 或者是充当\"一名白痴中的傻瓜\"的感觉 ,因为斯威夫特把社会看作是一片布满虚假目标的土地。
虚假目标的提法当然不是美国式思维。 然而,我们似乎执迷于花钱买幸福的理念。 当我们拥有足够的财力时,我们就会获得极大的成功。
与此同时,美国商业势力却大肆渲染,人为地使我们感到不幸福。 广告业是我们的主要产业之一,它的存在不是为了满足欲望,而是为了制造欲望,其速度之快为任何人的预算所不及。 这样一来,我们整个的经济就建立在使我们沉溺于贪婪的基础上。 甚至有人告诉我们通过购物来支持国家经济是我们的爱国义务。
随便翻开一本迎合妇女口味的杂志,不难发现,开头的几页广告都是艺术和口号,到了结尾的几页就都变成了药丸和疗法。 开头几页的艺术包装所展示的是对至尊美丽的渴望。 她拥有的是婴儿般的细腻皮肤。 她呼出来的是芬芳的气息。 无论她40岁、50岁、60岁,还是任何时候,她永远都拥有16岁的身段。 这就是母亲为了展示她的优美体形所使用的束带。 这是可使人肌肤恢复细嫩的护肤霜,这些是减去大腿脂肪的药片,这些是青春永驻的药丸。
很明显,任何有理智的人都不会完全被此类广告艺术、药丸或器械所打动。 不过确实有人想要花钱买这个梦,不惜为此每年花销数十亿美元。 显然,幸福市场不乏顾客,但是他们想要购买的又是什么呢?
他们或许会强调这样一个基本事实:幸福在于追求本身,在于参与和改变人生,也就是说,在于相信\"过程\"这一理念。 评估一个国家的标准,不是看它已经拥有什么,或者想要拥有什么,而是看它想要成为什么。
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