Part 5.- You are going to read an article about happiness. For questions 31-36, choose the answer (A, B, C, or D) which you think fits best according to the text.
The impossible moment
of delight
A recent survey has examined the
well-trodden ground of the relationship between pleasure and money. Many
studies have examined this, from any number of starting points, often
concluding, in the oldest of old clichés, that money can’t buy you happiness or,
in more sophisticated terms, that happiness and pleasure often reside, not in
riches in absolute terms, but in being richer than the people who happen to
live to your left or your right. Other studies have claimed that comparison
with the wealth of others lend to a ‘set-up for disappointment’ and that a good
attitude is all that matters.
This most recent study inquired
into the well-being of 136,000 people worldwide and compared it to levels of
income. I found, overall, that feelings of security and general satisfaction
did increase with financial status. Money, however, could not lift its
possessors to the next level, and was unable to provide enjoyment or pleasure
on its own. The survey, published in the Journal of Personality and Social
Psychology, examined large numbers of people from almost every culture on
Earth, and found much the same thing. The stereotype of the rich man who finds
life savourless and without pleasure was not invented simply to keep the poor
happy with their lot.
Paul Bloom addresses the same issue in this book How
Pleasure Works. According to Bloom, at the point when people get the thing
they really want, they enter a state of perfect pleasure. Both Bloom’s book and
the enormous survey concentrate on status and on the moment of getting
possession of something we want. Are we satisfied and filled with pleasure when
we get what we want? Bloom, looking at eager consumers, would say ‘yes’; the
survey tends to say ‘not necessarily.’ In my view, it’s rare that we can actually
pin down the specific moment when the feeling of pleasure is at its clearest.
Take the teenager determined to buy the latest must-have
gadget, a woman setting out to get a new handbag, or a prosperous businessman
who wants to add to his collection of Japanese netsuke. The setting out
with the happy intention of spending; the entering of the shop; the examination
of the wares; the long decision; the handing over of the money; the moment when
the ownership of the goods is transferred; the gloating at home; the moment when
the object is displayed to others. All these steps form a process in
employment, but almost all of them are redolent with anticipation or with
retrospective glee. The moment where bliss is at its peak is over in a flash,
and hardly exists at all. Everything else is expectation or memory.
Composers have always known this simple, basic truth:
pleasure is half anticipation and half blissful recollection, and hardly at all
about the fulfilment of the promise. The great musical statements of ecstasy,
such as Wagner’s Tristan and Isolde or Schubert’s first Suleika
song, are literally all half crescendo and half languid recall. We look forward
to pleasure; we look back on it. The moment of pleasure itself is over in a
flash, and often rather questionable.
The hairband and geegaw emporium. Claire’s Accessories has a
thoughtful, rather philosophical slogan to temp its young costumers. It sells
itself under the strapline ‘where getting ready is half of the fun.’ That is
honest and truthful. A group of 14-year-old girls in their party best is
nowhere near as successful an enterprise of pleasure as exactly the same girls
putting on and trying out and discussing their hopes of the party in advance,
not as successful either as talking it over the next day. The party itself,
from the beginning of time, has consisted of a lot of standing around gawping
and giggling, and someone crying in the lavatory.
So any notion of fulfilled pleasure which insists on the
moment of bliss is doomed to failure. Mr Bloom and the researchers of the Journal
of Personality and Social Psychology were clearly happiest when undertaking
their research during which time they were looking forward to coming to a
conclusion. And now they can sit back and start to say ‘Yes, when I concluded
any theory of pleasure and satisfaction…’ Even for philosophers of pleasure,
another ancient and well-handled cliché about travel and life is true: getting
there really is half the pleasure.
31.- The writer says that previous studies of happiness have
differed on…
A) whether having more money than others make people happy.
B) why people compare their financial situation to that of
others.
C) what makes people believe that money brings happiness.
D) how important it is for people to think that they are
happy.
32.- According to the writer, the most recent survey…
A) confirmed a common belief about wealth and happiness.
B) produced results that may surprise some people.
C) provided more accurate information than many other
surveys.
D) found that there was no connection between money and
happiness.
33.- In the third paragraph, the writer says that his own
opinion on the subject…
A) has been influenced by the results of the survey.
B) is based on his personal feelings rather than on
research.
C) differs from what Bloom concludes in his book.
D) might not be widely shared by other people.
34.- The writer says that the musical works he mentions…
A) are not intended to produce feelings of intense
happiness.
B) sometimes disappoint people who listen to them.
C) perfectly illustrate his point about pleasure.
D) show how hard it is to generalize about pleasure.
35.- The writer says that the company Claire’s Accessories
understands that…
A) parties are less enjoyable for girls than getting ready
for them.
B) girls enjoy getting ready for parties more than any other
aspect of them.
C) looking good at parties make girls happier than anything
else.
D) what girls wear for parties affects their memories of
them.
36.- The writer concludes that both Bloom and the
researchers…
A) would agree with his own theory of pleasure.
B) would agree with a certain cliché.
C) have made an important contribution to the study of
pleasure.
D) have gone through a process he has previously described.
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