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嫉妒对一个社会的心理健康和幸福感有害吗?对 18000 名成年人的纵向研究。

Is envy harmful to a society's psychological health and wellbeing? A longitudinal study of 18,000 adults.

机构信息

Institute for Markets and Strategy,Wirtschaftsuniversität Wien (WU), 1020 Vienna, Austria.

Behavioral Science and Economics, University of Warwick, Coventry, CV4 7AL, UK; IZA Institute, Schaumburg-Lippe-Str. 5-9, D-53113 Bonn, Germany.

出版信息

Soc Sci Med. 2018 Feb;198:103-111. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2017.12.030. Epub 2017 Dec 27.

Abstract

Nearly 100 years ago, the philosopher and mathematician Bertrand Russell warned of the social dangers of widespread envy. One view of modern society is that it is systematically developing a set of institutions -- such as social media and new forms of advertising -- that make people feel inadequate and envious of others. If so, how might that be influencing the psychological health of our citizens? This paper reports the first large-scale longitudinal research into envy and its possible repercussions. The paper studies 18,000 randomly selected individuals over the years 2005, 2009, and 2013. Using measures of SF-36 mental health and psychological well-being, four main conclusions emerge. First, the young are especially susceptible. Levels of envy fall as people grow older. This longitudinal finding is consistent with a cross-sectional pattern noted recently by Nicole E. Henniger and Christine R. Harris, and with the theory of socioemotional regulation suggested by scholars such as Laura L. Carstensen. Second, using fixed-effects equations and prospective analysis, the analysis reveals that envy today is a powerful predictor of worse SF-36 mental health and well-being in the future. A change from the lowest to the highest level of envy, for example, is associated with a worsening of SF-36 mental health by approximately half a standard deviation (p < .001). Third, no evidence is found for the idea that envy acts as a useful motivator. Greater envy is associated with slower -- not higher -- growth of psychological well-being in the future. Nor is envy a predictor of later economic success. Fourth, the longitudinal decline of envy leaves unaltered a U-shaped age pattern of well-being from age 20 to age 70. These results are consistent with the idea that society should be concerned about institutions that stimulate large-scale envy.

摘要

大约 100 年前,哲学家和数学家伯特兰·罗素(Bertrand Russell)就警告过,广泛的嫉妒会给社会带来危险。有一种观点认为,现代社会正在系统地发展出一系列制度,例如社交媒体和新型广告,这些制度让人们感到自己不如别人,从而产生嫉妒心理。如果真是这样,那么这会如何影响我们公民的心理健康呢?本文报告了首次对嫉妒及其可能产生的影响进行的大规模纵向研究。该研究对 2005 年、2009 年和 2013 年随机挑选的 18000 名个体进行了多年的跟踪研究。该研究使用了 SF-36 心理健康和心理幸福感量表,得出了以下四个主要结论。首先,年轻人尤其容易受到影响。随着年龄的增长,嫉妒水平会下降。这一纵向发现与妮可·E·亨尼格(Nicole E. Henniger)和克里斯汀·R·哈里斯(Christine R. Harris)最近指出的横断面模式以及劳拉·L·卡斯滕森(Laura L. Carstensen)等学者提出的社会情绪调节理论一致。其次,使用固定效应方程和前瞻性分析,分析表明,如今的嫉妒是未来 SF-36 心理健康状况恶化的有力预测指标。例如,从最低水平的嫉妒转变到最高水平的嫉妒,与 SF-36 心理健康状况恶化约半标准差(p<0.001)相关。第三,没有证据表明嫉妒是一种有用的激励因素。更高的嫉妒与未来心理幸福感的增长速度更慢(而不是更快)有关。嫉妒也不是未来经济成功的预测指标。第四,嫉妒的纵向下降并没有改变幸福感从 20 岁到 70 岁的 U 型年龄模式。这些结果与社会应该关注刺激大规模嫉妒的制度的观点一致。

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