Ratings2
Average rating4
A leading evolutionary psychologist probes the hidden instincts behind our working, shopping, and spendingEvolutionary psychologythe compelling science of human naturehas clarified the prehistoric origins of human behavior and influenced many fields ranging from economics to personal relationships. In Spent Geoffrey Miller applies this revolutionary sciences principles to a new domain: the sensual wonderland of marketing and status seeking that we call American consumer culture. Starting with the basic notion that the goods and services we buy unconsciously advertise our biological potential as mates and friends, Miller examines the hidden factors that dictate our choices in everything from lipstick to cars, from the magazines we read to the music we listen to. With humor and insight, Miller analyzes an array of product choices and deciphers what our decisions say about ourselves, giving us access to a new way of understandingand improvingour behaviors. Like Freakonomics or The Tipping Point, Spent is a bold and revelatory book that illuminates the unseen logic behind the chaos of consumerism and suggests new ways we can become happier consumers and more responsible citizens.
Reviews with the most likes.
Some ideas are well-argued, some are too broad just-so stories (also, proposing to change the whole economy without dealing with incentives for various groups is really naive). See also Robin Hanson's review.
This is good, although:
Parents lament the time their teenagers spend with such technologies. They seem like meaningless, self-indulgent distractions from the proper role of juveniles under consumerist capitalism: (1) studying counterintuitive sciences and irrelevant humanities to display intelligence and conscientiousness, (2) working in part-time minimum-wage jobs to learn humility and even more conscientiousness, (3) participating in extracurricular activities that will look good on college and job applications, and (4) spending money on status goods, fads, and dates.