I recently took a car ferry across to the island of Chiloé. In the distance, I could see work being done on a big new suspension bridge, which when completed will connect the large island province to the mainland. My first reaction was disappointment; I came too soon to experience the convenience of the new bridge.
My second reaction was to wonder whether greater convenience actually makes us happier. Riding the car ferry is a rather interesting experience, while driving over the bridge is somewhat more boring. On the other hand, there’s the revealed preference argument—if there were an option between the bridge and the ferry, I’d have taken the bridge (even if the toll were equal to the ferry charge.)
But is this revealed preference argument actually as strong as it seems? I don’t believe so. To explain why I’ll use the example of GPS navigation.
I have always had a good visual memory (and a poor verbal memory). Thus I am pretty good with maps, and am able to navigate in unfamiliar places based on the map in my mind. When I was younger, I got great satisfaction from using this skill when traveling overseas. My girlfriend called me “map head”. It may sound odd, but I derived great utility from creatively solving a series of problems.
GPS has rendered my navigation skill to be almost worthless. Now while driving in Chile I am just as much on autopilot as if I were driving to the grocery store in Orange County. Yes, I am free to continue doing things the old way, ignoring GPS. Indeed I often so so when alone. But with my wife? Who’s she likely to trust?
Progress imposes negative externalities on those who insist on doing things the old way. The knowledge that something better exists tends to devalue the inferior product. As a child, I watched The Wizard of Oz once a year on a black and white TV set. Now that I know the film is actually (mostly) in color, I could not bear to watch it in black and white.
Or, as food experts tell us: “Hunger is the best sauce.”
Nonetheless, I do believe that progress and happiness are closely related, but not because all these shiny new toys make us happier. Rather I suspect that both progress and happiness are the effects of a third factor—freedom. More specifically, I believe that people are happier when they are free to creatively engage in problem solving with the aim of making their lives better. Whether the new inventions actually make them happier is immaterial; people derive satisfaction from pursuing their dreams.
Here’s V.S. Naipaul:
Familiar words, easy to take for granted; easy to misconstrue . . . This idea of the pursuit of happiness is at the heart of the civilization to so many outside it or on the periphery. I find it marvelous to contemplate to what an extent, after two centuries, and after the terrible history of the earlier part of this century, the idea has come to a kind of fruition. It is an elastic idea; it fits all men. It implies a certain kind of society, a certain kind of awakened spirit. So much is contained in it: the idea of the individual, responsibility, choice, the life of the intellect, the idea of vocation and perfectibility and achievement. It is an immense human idea. It cannot be reduced to a fixed system. It cannot generate fanaticism. But it is known to exist; and because of that, other more rigid systems in the end blow away. (From a talk given in 1991–when the future still seemed bright.)
Of course, this post is merely restating a longstanding idea in philosophy—that it’s all about the journey, not the destination.
PS. My wife and I were recently walking on a trail through the woods of Chiloé. We could see the beach in the distance, and decided to walk in that direction. Right before the beach we encountered a stream that blocked our path, so we never reached the beach. At the same time, my wife was chatting with our daughter on the telephone. My daughter was surprised that we didn’t know about the stream. She could see it on a map that was tracking our movements on her phone, even though she was 6000 miles away! She had that exasperated “What’s wrong with you boomers” tone in her voice.
Modern technology allows us to plan trips in incredible detail. But I sort of miss the serendipity of the travel that I did when young, when I didn’t know exactly what my trip would involve before leaving home.
But that’s just me. My wife likes to plan.
Here’s that bridge project in the distance, through a porthole on the car ferry:
PPS. Just as I am good with maps, I am lousy with languages. I took three semesters of Spanish in college, and all I recall is “hola”. While I find GPS to be annoying, I’d really appreciate an instantaneous language translating device when traveling overseas. (My wife uses the iPhone translator, but it doesn’t actually work in the real world.)
READER COMMENTS
MarkW
Feb 22 2023 at 8:21pm
I find the use of GPS mapping enables serendipity. For one thing, when I’m not driving, it’s interesting to see what is nearby but not immediately visible from the road. Paper maps don’t work as well because of the scale and because they don’t include all the detail (including businesses, points of interest, etc). Several times, we’ve noticed something interesting popping up and spontaneously detoured to check it out. Also, we use an app called AllTrails when hiking. It has many trails that aren’t shown on the official park maps. Since we like solitude and because we often hike with our dog (which works better without crowds), we take the unofficial trails as often as we can. Computerized maps with topo information also make it much easier to go off trail. Last year we were looking for a place to put in a kayak in an unfamiliar river (the famous ‘Two Hearted River’ as it happens) — a bit of searching of satellite images in the area showed a dirt two-track that ended very close to the water, and it worked out perfectly. I feel like with GPS and all of the different map types and satellite images, we’ve been freed from following the beaten paths laid down by the map-makers and guide writers.
Oh, and Chiloe looks gorgeous. Some year after we’re retired, a month in Patagonia during our northern winter is definitely on the list (maybe along with an Antarctic cruise)
john hare
Feb 23 2023 at 2:53am
I use GPS to get to various jobs, but do miss the availability of paper maps. With a paper map it is easier to picture the whole territory and have a sense of location and direction. I would like to have the ready availability of both, but finding paper maps is difficult.
My wife speaks Spanish and fair English. I have an employee that speaks Portuguese and very limited English. I have almost no language capability beyond English and the availability of the phone translator makes things possible that couldn’t have worked even 10 years ago.
I am quite happy with the choices available now.
Capt. J Parker
Feb 23 2023 at 12:09pm
I was in Milan recently. In the cab going back to the airport the driver (a pleasant, older gentlemen) used a translator app to ask us if was OK to take a longer route that would be faster because of an accident. It seemed to work very well. He spoke the phrase into his phone in Italian and in two seconds, out came English. I believe it was a Google Translate App, which I have been trying out based on this experience.
I might be tough to use for a conversation but seems to work well for conveying essential information. It even seems to be able to recognize my poorly pronounced French.
Dylan
Feb 23 2023 at 1:13pm
There’s a lot of good stuff in this piece, but thought this was a particularly interesting idea that resonates, as someone who tends to insist on doing things the old way. Need to think about it more.
Also, I’m currently sitting in the airport waiting to go to Costa Rica for the first time. I do not have a good sense of direction at all, nevertheless I’m planning on going without electronic navigation and won’t have data on my phone. Half the fun of going somewhere is getting lost and figuring out how to find your way back. But yeah, that kind of travel is limited to my solo trips these days.
Travis Allison
Feb 23 2023 at 1:55pm
Very interesting, Scott. I know that you weren’t necessarily trying to produce a treatise for living that covers all of the edge cases in a blog post, but here are some quibbles. You said, “I believe that people are happier when they are free to creatively engage in problem solving with the aim of making their lives better.” What do you mean by “making their lives better”? If you mean “making themselves happier”, then your prescription is circular. If you mean “making their lives better” is equal to “having more shiny toys”, then your prescription for happiness could be more simply said, “People are happier when they are free to creatively engage in problem solving with the aim of making shiny new toys.” The latter doesn’t sound as persuasive, but it might be somewhat true for humans.
Another more general possibility is, “making their lives better” means “achieving something they want”. Then it seems that your prescription depends on a person deciding what one “wants” to aim at, all the time knowing it will be the problem solving to achieve the “want” rather than actually having the “want” itself that will produce happiness. In this scheme, the “want” is pretty arbitrary, perhaps subject to human genetic propensities. But then knowing your prescription for happiness actually *reduces* the likelihood of achieving happiness because the person knows that actually achieving the “want” won’t make that person (or anyone else) happier. In order to be happy, we have to fool ourselves into thinking that achieving the “want” will make us happier, otherwise we won’t be happily enjoying the problem solving.
Happiness is multifaceted that can’t be boiled down to a prescription, unfortunately. Older people who are social might not be engaging in a lot of problem solving anymore, but they might still be happy. I think happiness is some “state of being” that can be occupied with a variety of techniques. And in some cases, this “state of being” can be somewhat stable – happiness becomes an actual “destination” and there isn’t any journey involved at all.
Scott Sumner
Feb 23 2023 at 5:00pm
Everyone, Thanks for the comments—all very good points.
I would avoid Chile in January and February, as the tourist areas are quite crowded. Consider December or March
Danno
Feb 27 2023 at 12:58pm
Scott,
I took students on a tour of Chile during our summer/their winter. We stayed in central Chile which was great even in winter (around here it was more like late fall weather than winter). At the end of the tour the tour guide suggested that we come back in November when the flowers are beautiful.
Philo
Feb 24 2023 at 10:03pm
We enjoy exercising abilities that have been bred into us by evolutionary adaptation to our ancestral environment. In our modern environment many of the conditions that led to the implantation of those abilities in us have disappeared, but we tend to find—-to create, if necessary—-other circumstances for their exercise. We do miss meeting frequent life-threatening challenges–we mostly have to pretend that what we are doing is as important as preserving lives (especially our own and those of our family); fortunately, we are good at pretending.
As for Spanish, I bet you know more than you are letting on—‘buenos días’, ‘adios’, ‘gracias’, ‘por favor’, ‘hasta la vista (baby)’!
Dave
Feb 25 2023 at 3:59pm
Love to see you expand on that, reminded me of something you wrote last year using the example of Novocaine at the dentist (or rather the lack thereof) and how that constituted progress or not. I fear that a lot of the current rhetoric around “progress studies” is very carefully avoiding to address its weak foundations.
Warren Platts
Feb 28 2023 at 3:29pm
Old enough to remember that! 🙂
Garrett
Mar 2 2023 at 10:34pm
GPS in the form of the phone app AllTrails has awakened a love for hiking and trail-walking. Being able to pull up a bunch of options for hikes and get car directions directly to parking spots, with reviews and pictures of the trail, is peak modernity.