The Study
Lead researchers Satoshi Kanazawa and Norman Li explained that for those seeking happiness, the “hermit in the woods” strategy” might help. Their research showed that human beings are happier when they live in areas that are less densely populated. They also found that a person’s happiness increases when a greater percentage of their social interactions are with loved ones, as opposed to casual friends or acquaintances
Researcher Carol Graham, who studies the economics of happiness, explained, “These findings suggest (and it is no surprise) that those with more intelligence and the capacity to use it are less likely to spend so much time socializing because they are focused on some other longer term objective.”
In other words, highly intelligent people tend to use their time to solve a current problem they are working through.
Sources:
I Heart Intelligence
The Washington Post
Wiley Online Library
Ricochet
Via: David Wolfe;


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