30 Jan Would You Trade Years of Life for Happiness?
The New York Times blog called “Well” recently asked: “Will Olympic Athletes Dope if They Know It Might Kill Them?” The answer is surprisingly clear: Many would if they could. In bi-annual surveys conducted from 1982 to 1995, researcher Bob Goldman asked elite athletes whether they would take a drug that guaranteed them a gold medal but would also kill them within five years. Again and again about half the athletes said yes, they would accept such a trade-off. This question has come to be known as the Goldman dilemma, and for most of us the high rate of acceptance is shocking. In contrast, a 2009 study asked the same question of the Australian general public, and only two of 250 respondents reported they would accept this Faustian bargain.
Sports success obviously matters more to dedicated athletes than to the rest of us. But what about success in general? Or happiness? Would you give up years of life in exchange for more happiness, in whatever form that may take?
One factor that colors our willingness to trade longevity for happiness is how we deal with probability…want to read more?