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1、The Origins of Pleasure(by Paul Bloom)Im going to talk today about the pleasures of everyday life. But I want to begin with a story of an unusual and terrible man. This is Hermann Goering. Goering was Hitlers second in command in World War II, his designated successor. And like Hitler, Goering fanci

2、ed himself a collector of art. He went through Europe, through World War II, stealing, extorting and occasionally buying various paintings for his collection. And what he really wanted was something by Vermeer. Hitler had two of them, and he didnt have any. So he finally found an art dealer, a Dutch

3、 art dealer named Han van Meegeren, who sold him a wonderful Vermeer for the cost of what would now be 10 million dollars. And it was his favorite artwork ever.World War II came to an end, and Goering was captured, tried at Nuremberg and ultimately sentenced to death. Then the Allied forces went thr

4、ough his collections and found the paintings and went after the people who sold it to him. And at some point the Dutch police came into Amsterdam and arrested Van Meegeren. Van Meegeren was charged with the crime of treason, which is itself punishable by death. Six weeks into his prison sentence, va

5、n Meegeren confessed. But he didnt confess to treason. He said, I did not sell a great masterpiece to that Nazi. I painted it myself; Im a forger. Now nobody believed him. And he said, Ill prove it. Bring me a canvas and some paint, and I will paint a Vermeer much better than I sold that disgusting

6、Nazi. I also need alcohol and morphine, because its the only way I can work. (Laughter) So they brought him in. He painted a beautiful Vermeer. And then the charges of treason were dropped. He had a lesser charge of forgery, got a year sentence and died a hero to the Dutch people. Theres a lot more

7、to be said about van Meegeren, but I want to turn now to Goering, whos pictured here being interrogated at Nuremberg.Now Goering was, by all accounts, a terrible man. Even for a Nazi, he was a terrible man. His American interrogators described him as an amicable psychopath. But you could feel sympat

8、hy for the reaction he had when he was told that his favorite painting was actually a forgery. According to his biographer, He looked as if for the first time he had discovered there was evil in the world. (Laughter) And he killed himself soon afterwards. He had discovered after all that the paintin

9、g he thought was this was actually that. It looked the same, but it had a different origin, it was a different artwork.It wasnt just him who was in for a shock. Once van Meegeren was on trial, he couldnt stop talking. And he boasted about all the great masterpieces that he himself had painted that w

10、ere attributed to other artists. In particular, The Supper at Emmaus which was viewed as Vermeers finest masterpiece, his best work - people would come from all over the world to see it - was actually a forgery. It was not that painting, but that painting. And when that was discovered, it lost all i

11、ts value and was taken away from the museum.1 / 7Why does this matter? Im a psychologists - why do origins matter so much? Why do we respond so much to our knowledge of where something comes from? Well theres an answer that many people would give. Many sociologists like Veblen and Wolfe would argue

12、that the reason why we take origins so seriously is because were snobs, because were focused on status. Among other things, if you want to show off how rich you are, how powerful you are, its always better to own an original than a forgery because theres always going to be fewer originals than forge

13、ries. I dont doubt that that plays some role, but what I want to convince you of today is that theres something else going on. I want to convince you that humans are, to some extent, natural born essentialists. What I mean by this is we dont just respond to things as we see them, or feel them, or he

14、ar them. Rather, our response is conditioned on our beliefs, about what they really are, what they came from, what theyre made of, what their hidden nature is. I want to suggest that this is true, not just for how we think about things, but how we react to things.So I want to suggest that pleasure i

15、s deep - and that this isnt true just for higher level pleasures like art, but even the most seemingly simple pleasures are affected by our beliefs about hidden essences. So take food. Would you eat this? Well, a good answer is, It depends. What is it? Some of you would eat it if its pork, but not b

16、eef. Some of you would eat it if its beef, but not pork. Few of you would eat it if its a rat or a human. Some of you would eat it only if its a strangely colored piece of tofu. Thats not so surprising.But whats more interesting is how it tastes to you will depend critically on what you think youre

17、eating. So one demonstration of this was done with young children. How do you make children not just be more likely to eat carrots and drink milk, but to get more pleasure from eating carrots and drinking milk - to think they taste better? Its simple, you tell them theyre from McDonalds. They believ

18、e McDonalds food is tastier, and it leads them to experience it as tastier.How do you get adults to really enjoy wine? Its very simple: pour it from an expensive bottle. There are now dozens, perhaps hundreds of studies showing that if you believe youre drinking the expensive stuff, it tastes better

19、 to you. This was recently done with a neuroscientific twist. They get people into a fMRI scanner, and while theyre lying there, through a tube, they get to sip wine. In front of them on a screen is information about the wine. Everybody, of course, drinks exactly the same wine. But if you believe yo

20、ure drinking expensive stuff, parts of the brain associated with pleasure and reward light up like a Christmas tree. Its not just that you say its more pleasurable, you say you like it more, you really experience it in a different way.Or take sex. These are stimuli Ive used in some of my studies. An

21、d if you simply show people these pictures, theyll say these are fairly attractive people. But how attractive you find them, how romantically moved you are by them, rests critically on who you think youre looking at. You probably think the picture on the left is male, the one on the right is female.

22、 If that belief turns out to be mistaken, it will make a difference. (Laughter) It will make a difference if they turn out to be much younger or much older than you think they are. It will make a difference if you were to discover that the person youre looking at with lust is actually a disguised ve

23、rsion of your son or daughter, your mother or father. Knowing somebodys your kin typically kills the interest. Maybe one of the most heartening findings from the psychology of pleasure is theres more to looking good than your physical appearance. If you like somebody, they look better to you. This i

24、s why spouses in happy marriages tend to think that their husband or wife looks much better than anyone else thinks that they do.So Capgras syndrome is a disorder where you get a specific delusion. Sufferers of Capgras syndrome believe that the people they love most in the world have been replaced b

25、y perfect duplicates. Now often, a result of Capgras syndrome is tragic. People have murdered those that they loved, believing that they were murdering an imposter. But theres at least one case where Capgras syndrome had a happy ending. This was recorded in 1931. Research described a woman with Capg

26、ras syndrome who complained about her poorly endowed and sexually inadequate lover. But that was before she got Capgras syndrome. After she got it, She was happy to report that she has discovered that he possessed a double who was rich, virile, handsome and aristocratic. Of course, it was the same m

27、an, but she was seeing him in different ways.As a third example, consider consumer products. So one reason why you might like something is its utility. You can put shoes on your feet; you can play golf with golf clubs; and chewed up bubble gum doesnt do anything at all for you. But each of these thr

28、ee objects has value above and beyond what it can do for you based on its history. The golf clubs were owned by John F. Kennedy and sold for three-quarters of a million dollars at auction. The bubble gum was chewed up by pop star Britney Spears and sold for several hundreds of dollars. And in fact,

29、theres a thriving market in the partially eaten food of beloved people. (Laughter) The shoes are perhaps the most valuable of all. According to an unconfirmed report, a Saudi millionaire offered 10 million dollars for this pair of shoes. They were the ones thrown at George Bush at an Iraqi press con

30、ference several years ago.Now this attraction to objects doesnt just work for celebrity objects. Each one of us, most people, have something in our life thats literally irreplaceable, in that it has value because of its history - maybe your wedding ring, maybe your childs baby shoes - so that if it

31、was lost, you couldnt get it back. You could get something that looked like it or felt like it, but you couldnt get the same object back. With my colleagues George Newman and Gil Diesendruck, weve looked to see what sort of factors, what sort of history, matters for the objects that people like. So

32、in one of our experiments, we asked people to name a famous person who they adored, a living person they adored.So one answer was George Clooney. Then we asked them, How much would you pay for George Clooneys sweater? And the answer is a fair amount - more than you would pay for a brand new sweater

33、or a sweater owned by somebody who you didnt adore. Then we asked other groups of subjects - we gave them different restrictions and different conditions. So for instance, we told some people, Look, you can buy the sweater, but you cant tell anybody you own it, and you cant resell it. That drops the

34、 value of it, suggesting that thats one reason why we like it. But what really causes an effect is you tell people, Look, you could resell it, you could boast about it, but before it gets to you, its thoroughly washed. That causes a huge drop in the value. As my wife put it, Youve washed away the Cl

35、ooney cooties.So lets go back to art. I would love a Chagall. I love the work of Chagall. But I dont want a duplicate, even if I cant tell the difference. Thats not because, or its not simply because, Im a snob and want to boast about having an original. Rather, its because I want something that has

36、 a specific history. In the case of artwork, the history is special indeed. The philosopher Denis Dutton in his wonderful book The Art Instinct makes the case that, The value of an artwork is rooted in assumptions about the human performance underlying its creation. And that could explain the differ

37、ence between an original and a forgery. They may look alike, but they have a different history. The original is typically the product of a creative act, the forgery isnt. I think this approach can explain differences in peoples taste in art.This is a work by Jackson Pollock. Who here likes the work

38、of Jackson Pollock? Okay. Who here, it does nothing for them? They just dont like it. Im not going to make a claim about whos right, but I will make an empirical claim about peoples intuitions, which is that, if you like the work of Jackson Pollock, youll tend more so than the people who dont like i

39、t to believe that these works are difficult to create, that they require a lot of time and energy and creative energy. I use Jackson Pollock on purpose as an example because theres a young American artist who paints very much in the style of Jackson Pollock, and her work was worth many tens of thous

40、ands of dollars - in large part because shes a very young artist.This is Marla Olmstead who did most of her work when she was three years old. The interesting thing about Marla Olmstead is her family made the mistake of inviting the television program 60 Minutes II into their house to film her paint

41、ing. And they then reported that her father was coaching her. When this came out on television, the value of her art dropped to nothing. It was the same art, physically, but the history had changed.Ive been focusing now on the visual arts, but I want to give two examples from music. This is Joshua B

42、ell, a very famous violinist. And the Washington Post reporter Gene Weingarten decided to enlist him for an audacious experiment. The question is: How much would people like Joshua Bell, the music of Joshua Bell, if they didnt know they were listening to Joshua Bell? So he got Joshua Bell to take hi

43、s million dollar violin down to a Washington D.C. subway station and stand in the corner and see how much money he would make. And heres a brief clip of this. (Violin music) After being there for three-quarters of an hour, he made 32 dollars. Not bad. Its also not good. Apparently to really enjoy th

44、e music of Joshua Bell, you have to know youre listening to Joshua Bell. He actually made 20 dollars more than that, but he didnt count it. Because this woman comes up - you see at the end of the video - she comes up. She had heard him at the Library of Congress a few weeks before at this extravagan

45、t black-tie affair. So shes stunned that hes standing in a subway station. So shes struck with pity. She reaches into her purse and hands him a 20.The second example from music is from John Cages modernist composition, 433. As many of you know, this is the composition where the pianist sits at a ben

46、ch, opens up the piano and sits and does nothing for four minutes and 33 seconds - that period of silence. And people have different views on this. But what I want to point out is you can buy this from iTunes. (Laughter) For a dollar 99, you can listen to that silence, which is different than other forms of silence.Now Ive been talking so far about pleasure, but what I want to suggest is that everything Ive said applies as well to pain. And how you think about what youre e

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