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Psychology
Stumbling on Happiness by Daniel Gilbert

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Psychology3.984K ratings·Published 2006

Stumbling on Happiness

by Daniel Gilbert

Pages277
DifficultyAccessible
ToneWitty
CategoryPsychology
Kineno editors

Editorial review

Gilbert is a serious researcher and an unusually funny writer — a combination that makes this book the friendliest entry into the science of affective forecasting. The core finding is humbling: we are systematically bad at predicting what will make our future selves happy.

In brief

AI-generated summary

Drawing on cognitive science, the Harvard psychologist Daniel Gilbert explains why imagined future experiences feel reliable but routinely mislead us — and what that says about the strange, predictive enterprise of trying to plan a life.

What you'll leave with

Key takeaways

  • 1

    Imagination smuggles in the present's emotions when picturing the future.

  • 2

    We adapt to good and bad events much faster than we predict.

  • 3

    Ordinary days, not peak experiences, are where most of life happens.

  • 4

    Asking people who already live the life is more accurate than imagining it.

Who should read this

The right reader

Anyone making a major life decision (career, move, partner). A useful corrective to advice driven by pure introspection.

Themes

What it touches

HappinessPredictionMemoryBias
Emotional tone

How it reads

Witty, research-driven.

Reading difficulty: Accessible

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