Recent trends show that people increasingly value material goods - TopicsExpress



          

Recent trends show that people increasingly value material goods over relationships—but neuroscience and evolution say this goes against our nature. Matthew Lieberman, a distinguished social psychologist and neuroscientist, basically won the lottery. This past summer, he was offered three million dollars for an academic position—one million in raw income and two to do lab research. That’s a king’s ransom for a psychology professor. On average, psychology professors make less than six figures and rely on a patchwork of modest grants to sustain their research. All Lieberman had to do was spend four months this year and next year in Moscow, a nice enough city, doing some research—which he would have done anyway at home at UCLA. But there was a catch. He would have to be away from his wife Naomi and seven-year-old son Ian for those eight months. They could not join him in Moscow. He had a basic trade-off problem, one that kept him up for many night... Continue Reading
Posted on: Sat, 09 Nov 2013 20:17:50 +0000

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