Science, Bible Agree On Giving

RANDOLPH E. SCHMID | March 20, 2008 06:49 PM EST | AP

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WASHINGTON — The Bible counsels misers that it's better to give than to receive. Science agrees. People who made gifts to others or to charities reported they were happier than folks who didn't share, according to a report in Friday's issue of the journal Science.

While previous studies have shown that having more money can increase happiness, the researchers at the University of British Columbia and Harvard University wondered if the way people spent their money made any difference.

Turns out, it does.

Lead researcher Elizabeth W. Dunn, an assistant professor of psychology at the University of British Columbia, said she wasn't surprised that doing something for others made people happy.

But she was struck by how big the effect was and that how people spent money was more important than how much money they had.

"This work suggests that even making small alterations in how we spend money on a daily basis can make a difference in happiness," Dunn said in a telephone interview.

"That doesn't mean go get a high paying job so you can spend tons of money on others. The message is, given what you have, how can you make little alterations to do something for others," she said.

And, she added, "there's nothing special about money," giving can involve time or special skills to help other people.

The report didn't surprise Sue Citro, senior digital membership manager for the Nature Conservancy:

"We do hear from our members and our supporters that the do get a real feeling of satisfaction from knowing their giving is doing good," she said.

Andrea Koslow, director of advertising at the American Red Cross, said: "The act of helping has its own profound effect."

"People need a humanitarian outlet ... feeling that they make a difference ... that's very motivating," Koslow said.

The good feeling associated with giving is why workplace charity opportunities can engage employees and lift morale, added Kristine Templin, director of corporate partnerships at the American Red Cross.

The researchers started by asking a sample of 632 Americans, 55 percent of whom were women, to rate their happiness on a scale of 1 to 5, the higher the number the happier.

Then they asked the participants to report their annual income and estimate how much they spent on paying bills, buying gifts for themselves, buying gifts for others and giving to charity.

The first two were considered personal spending and averaged $1,714-a-month, the second two were termed "prosocial" spending and averaged $146-a-month.

"Personal spending was unrelated to happiness," said the researchers. "But higher prosocial spending was associated with significantly greater happiness," they found.

Not content with that, they then studied 16 employees of a company in Boston, asking about their happiness one month before and six to eight weeks after each received a profit-sharing bonus from their employer.

In the second interview they also asked about personal and prosocial spending and once again those who spent more on others were happier.

"The manner in which they spent that bonus was a more important predictor of their happiness than the amount of the bonus itself," the researchers found.

Finally, 46 Canadian students were asked to rate their happiness and then each was given a random envelope containing money, ranging from $5 to $20. Some were instructed to spend it on themselves, others were told to buy a gift for someone else.

At 5 p.m. that day, they were called together again and asked to rate their happiness.

The amount of money had no impact on happiness, but those assigned to buy something for another person reported greater happiness than those told to get something for themselves, the researchers said.

A separate study published in 2006 in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences found that the same parts of the brain that produce the good feeling when a person receives a reward also respond when they give to someone else.

Indeed, researchers led by Jordan Grafman at the National Institutes of Health found the reward areas were more active when giving a gift than when receiving one.

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Associated Press Writer Natasha Metzler contributed to this report.

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Science: http://www.sciencemag.org


 
 

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- ExRepublican See Profile I'm a Fan of ExRepublican permalink

"People who gave gifts to others reported they were happier than folks who didn't share,"

bingo bango! :-) and duh. But I think we should take it one step further. Those that have money (or physical abilities) to give to others should ask TWO things of the (good) people they help out.

1). Please pay it back as best you can.
2) Once back on your feet, you MUST turn around and help someone else out that was in a similar situation. Financially or physically, whatever you have to offer. HELP SOMEONE THAT WAS IN YOUR POSITION. You MUST give it back to someone else. or noooooooo deal.

Can you imagine how we'd leap forward in every way if the majority did this? you know, progress. People would start trusting others again. The WORLD would move ahead in so many ways.

And forget the giving to 'charity', churches or politicians. That doesn't count. That is called stupidity. Esp. the politicians - as if they need your money! Suckah

Everyone of us has family, friends or neighbors (real people) who could use our help. Every single one of us. Good people/blood that have been slapped around through no fault of their own. Help 'em get back on their feet. Simple and very rewarding.

Pollyanish thinking on my part? I think not.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:00 PM on 03/23/2008
- Dave24 See Profile I'm a Fan of Dave24 permalink

Science and the bible do not agree. Science studies and observes reality, filtering out bias. The bible is a manmade collection of fables invented by uneducated people, who then *applied* those unfounded ideas *to* reality.

Taking care of others implies that others will take care of you as well. It feels good to give because we empathize, and we can thank Darwinian evolution for this, not ancient narratives the preach faith over reason.

If there are any "truths" to the bible, or "alignments" with science, it's pure coincidence, and coincidence alone.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:57 PM on 03/21/2008
- carcinoid112 See Profile I'm a Fan of carcinoid112 permalink

Ah, how...pseudointellectual of you.

Funny that there are so many people that are scientists, good scientists that do NOT subscribe to your My Way Or The Highway school of thought on faith. Assuming that a person of science cannot also be a person of faith is a rude and self-centered bit of magical thinking expressed mostly by people that lack the ability to tolerate any dissent from their own rigid thought patterns.

That you're no more able to have an open mind than any other rigid fundamentalist should give you pause to think, but it probably won't. Rant and rave at me if it makes you feel better. Your choice to believe as you wish is--your choice. Do NOT think it's proper, or intelligent to insult others for not believing as you do. When you do, you're in the same league as those charmers from Westboro Baptist Church--a hate-filled ranting jackass.

I'd be ashamed to have just put myself in that company if I were you.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:21 AM on 03/22/2008
- lauram See Profile I'm a Fan of lauram permalink

Givers make better lovers too!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:03 PM on 03/21/2008
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