This audiobook is narrated by a digital voice.
This is a review of The Happiness Hypothesis by Jonathan Haidt. Haidt attempts bridging ancient wisdom with modern psychology research, exploring concepts like the divided mind and pursuit of meaning over pleasure. He uses the rider-elephant metaphor for conscious reasoning directing unconscious forces. However, his selection of ancient wisdom conveniently aligns with Western psychology while ignoring contradictory traditions. Research relies heavily on college students from wealthy countries, yet makes universal claims about human nature. Cultural assumptions about happiness and individualistic bias pervade the analysis. Best approached as starting point for thinking about wellbeing rather than definitive guide. Independent, unaffiliated—informational only, not a substitute for the book.