You kind of miss the point (a lot).
No one is talking about a Utopia. What it would take to impose the society in Brave New World is irrelevant, as is wether such a society would "produce happiness."
I disagree. The thing is that the history of actually making it to the promised land is not good. The French Revolution and who knows how many Marxist revolutions are evidence enough of that. What we think should be a better world, is very often nothing of the kind. Given that the New Jerusalem is unlikely to actually appear as imagined, the amount of blood that must be spilled to find out seems relevant to me.
The point is that you are suggesting things were better...people were happier...when distinct groups of people had distinct roles in society based upon birth which could only rarely be crossed.
I'm suggesting that that graph calls into question whether, for all its material advantages, the modern world has made people happier. By all means reject them all, but there are studies showing conservatives being happier than liberals, anxiety levels increasing and being correlated with loss of social cohesion. All the graphs I see seem to show measures of wellbeing heading in the wrong direction.
That a man would have something very like the life his father had and a woman would have a life very much like her mother had has been the state of man for the whole of human history, save for the blink of an eye. The idea that entirely novel principles that run contrary to human evolution are in fact the best model for man to live under seems to me to require proof. Many aspects of the modern world are here by historical necessity, so there is nothing that can be done about them. I am talking about whether the principles founding liberalism are actually "true".
When all of this was first thought up, the liberal principles were justified in terms of a fantasy of noble savages and the state of nature that bore little relation to reality. Effectively my argument is the same as Rousseau's in terms of looking back to the state of nature.... only he was referring to an 18th century fantasy.
It's essentially a caste system. Brave New World is simply what you are advocating taken to the extreme. (Most Utopian/Dystopian fiction does that.)
No. I am advocating nothing beyond thinking that maximising happiness is more important than maximising equality. I am saying what I believe the nature of man is and that the progressive-liberal interpretation of liberty and equality are questionable principles. The brave new world thing requires a top down centralised managerial state of the form progressive liberalism produces. It's the same rationalist idea of implementing utopia that gets repeated over and over. It's tricky though.... a tyrannical state seems like an inevitable side effect of progress. Maybe that is another reason that the past was better ;-)
What you advocate is that women were happier when they were isolated from the responsibilities and concerns of the outside world. Men could handle that. Women got to stay home with their babies and keep the house clean.
I think that that may be the case. I don't say we should reimplement it, since one can't go back. I do think the liberal assumptions about man are false though.
I'm not sure that I am going to take a site promoting flexible work as a reliable source on the history of flexible work.
It wasn't until the Renaissance, apparently, where working away from home and family was the norm. Did being away from their wives and kids make men less happy? More happy? Who knows. But the point is that the lesser involvement of men in the household seems to be a relatively recent thing.
Humanity has spent much more time in small groups and small communities than in any other lifestyle. Throughout that time, what you see over and over and over.... is the man as the provider/protector and the woman as nurturer, homemaker and so on. Does that change forms, of course. I don't know what you think the significance is of a medieval peasant working a field close to his home, or driving his flock to a nearby market. If somebody had to spend weeks marching the christmas geese to London and somebody had to stay home looking after the children, who do you think had each role?
I don't know what case you think I was making, but that site doesn't refute it.
It's like the Nirvana song I quoted, which compares that to an insect kept in a jar. Safe from the dangers of the world, food and anything else you might need provided for. But utterly dependent on the zookeeper (husband).
Unless we are sociopaths, the nature of the world is that we depend on other people for our happiness. All this is pointless. You have a bunch of principles about what makes people happy based on liberty and equality, I have a different set that focuses more on community. If we are arguing based on different axioms, we are never going to agree about these things. That's why I initially brought up the paradox of female happiness, because it is actually data.
Is a lion happier in a cage in a zoo? It doesn't have to worry about predators or hunting for its next meal. Even mates will be provided, and plenty of toys for exercise.
Sure, are the sexual roles that have evolved over millions of years a socially constructed prison, or are they baked into us in some way? If lions ancestors had lived in zoos for the past 100 million years, maybe they would indeed be happier in the cage.
Exposure to things that you find you enjoy, the opportunity to do those things, creates a desire to do them.
Yes, like crack and internet porn.
If I never played guitar, I would be perfectly happy. But now I'd miss having them. Not because I would really be less happy than if I never had them, but because having them expands my range of possible happiness. Without my guitars, I'm at, say a 5 on the happiness scale. But without ever playing one, I thought the scale only went to 6. So I would have said, I'm pretty happy. But now I see a scale that goes to 8. With my guitars, I'm at a 7 and would say I'm pretty happy. Without them, I would be back at a 5. The same 5 as before. But now I'm evaluating it on a scale of 8 instead of 6. I'd term a 5/6 as pretty happy but a 5/8 is more meh...I'm OK, but could be a lot better.
Why would you be just as happy without a guitar, if you are the same as before, but now miss having a guitar? Are you sure it isn't that, having experienced the guitar, the previous state of not having the guitar is now rendered less happy?
But objectively, I'm still at the same level of happiness, I just perceive it differently because I know that the upper end exists.
Happiness is pure perception. It is a subjective state. The questions in the data we are discussing use a fixed scale. You need to scale your happiness based on how happy you feel, not based on whatever this notion of objective happiness is that you are using.