Dan Ariely: How equal do we want the world to be? You'd be surprised
Dan Airely: Dan Ariely: Koliko jednakosti u svijetu želimo? Iznenadili biste se
The dismal science of economics is not as firmly grounded in actual behavior as was once supposed. In "Predictably Irrational," Dan Ariely told us why. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
objective in life,
these color-tinted glasses
što imamo te obojane naočale
something as simple as beer.
jednostavnom kao pivo.
on intensity and bitterness,
njihovu jačinu i gorčinu,
different space.
će različita mjesta.
to be objective about it?
it would be very simple.
to bi bilo jako jednostavno.
you tasted the same beer,
da ste kušali isto pivo,
things would look slightly different.
stvari bi izgledale malo drugačije.
be able to distinguish them,
will be Guinness.
razmišljati o fiziologiji.
something from their physiology?
nešto očekuju od svoje fiziologije?
pain medications.
lijekove protiv boli.
the medications were expensive.
da su ti lijekovi bili skupi.
rekli smo da su bili jeftini.
pain medication worked better.
djelovali su bolje.
do change our physiology.
stvarno mijenjaju našu fiziologiju.
odvijanje utakmice ne gledate
our preconceived notions
unaprijed stvoreni stavovi
in more important questions?
s mnogo važnijim pitanjima?
that had to do with social justice?
koja su povezana sa socijalnom pravdom?
what is the blind tasting version
verziju kušanja na slijepo
level of inequality we have?
razinu nejednakosti imamo?
do we want to have?
nejednakosti želimo imati?
the poorest on the right
s desne strane
the next 20 percent,
sljedećih 20 posto,
and the richest 20 percent.
i najbogatijih 20 posto.
how much wealth do you think
koliko mislite da je bogatstva
svakoj od tih grupa.
imagine I ask you to tell me,
da sam vas upitao,
is concentrated
bogatstva koncentrirano
and have a number.
i odaberite broj.
have a real number in your mind.
odaberite u glavi stvarni broj.
of Americans tell us.
mnogo Amerikanaca.
has 58 percent of the wealth.
ima 58 posto bogatstva.
to what you thought.
s onim što ste vi mislili.
has 0.1 percent of the wealth.
ima 0,1 posto bogatstva.
has 0.2 percent of the wealth.
ima 0,2 posto bogatstva.
has 84-85 percent of the wealth.
ima 84-85 posto bogatstva.
and what we think we have
i ono što mislimo da imamo
the philosopher John Rawls.
of what's a just society.
što je to pravedno društvo.
you knew everything about it,
znajući sve o njemu,
to enter it in a random place.
you might want the wealthy
vjerojatno biste željeli
a siromašni manje.
biste željeli više jednakosti.
want more equality.
to go into that society
and you don't know,
a ne znate,
in which you don't know
u kojem ne znate
when you make a decision,
the "veil of ignorance."
a large group of Americans,
veliku grupu Amerikanaca,
in the veil of ignorance.
pod velom neznanja.
that would make you want to join it,
bi vas navele da joj se pridružite,
randomly at any place?
na bilo kojem mjestu?
to the first group,
about 10 percent of the wealth.
10 posto bogatstva.
wanted full equality.
nije želio potpunu jednakost.
is a fantastic idea in our sample.
da je socijalizam fantastična ideja.
and what we think we have,
i što mislimo da imamo,
between what we think is right
između onoga što mislimo da je ispravno
by the way, not just about wealth.
ne samo o bogatstvu.
o drugim stvarima također.
from different parts of the world
ljudima iz različitih dijelova svijeta
the same answer.
they gave us the same answer,
dobili smo iste odgovore,
i čitatelje Forbesa.
Australia, the U.S. --
Australiji, SAD-u --
u različitim odjelima sveučilišta.
departments of a university.
almost every department,
i provjerili skoro svaki odjel,
to have more and the [poor] to have less,
imaju više, a siromašni manje,
to Harvard Business School.
pohađali Harvard Business School.
about something else.
postavili o nečem drugom.
of CEO pay to unskilled workers?
direktora i nekvalificiranih radnika?
people think is the ratio,
što ljudi misle da je omjer,
what do they think should be the ratio?
što misle kakav bi omjer trebao biti.
well, it's not that bad, right?
pa to nije tako loše, zar ne?
are not that different.
I didn't draw them on the same scale.
nacrtao u istom mjerilu.
and blue in there.
tu unutra su žuta i plava.
posljedicama bogatstva?
sa stvarima poput zdravlja?
of prescription medication?
what we learned was that people
ustanovili smo da ljudi
nejednakost, koja je posljedica bogatstva,
which is an outcome of wealth,
u zdravlju ili obrazovanju.
in health or education.
are particularly open
da su ljudi posebno otvoreni
when it comes to people
kada se radi o ljudima
as responsible for their situation.
odgovorni za svoju situaciju.
and we have a desirability gap
i imamo jaz poželjnosti.
is something that we think about,
o čemu razmišljamo,
differently about inequality
razmišljaju o nejednakosti
in terms of health, education,
u terminima zdravlja, obrazovanja,
about what we really want?
razmišljaju o onom što stvarno žele?
the Rawls way of looking at the world,
Rowlsov pogled na svijet,
out of the picture.
to a higher degree
implementirati na višoj razini
i jaz djelovanja.
and actually do something about it?
učiniti nešto u vezi toga?
is to think about people
da razmišljamo o ljudima
that don't have much agency,
koji nemaju puno mogućnosti djelovanja
more willing to do this.
next time you go to drink beer or wine,
sljedeći puta kada pijete pivo ili vino,
in your experience that is real,
u vašem doživljaju što je stvarno,
that is a placebo effect
što je placebo efekt
for other decisions in your life,
za druge odluke u vašem životu,
za politička pitanja
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Dan Ariely - Behavioral economistThe dismal science of economics is not as firmly grounded in actual behavior as was once supposed. In "Predictably Irrational," Dan Ariely told us why.
Why you should listen
Dan Ariely is a professor of psychology and behavioral economics at Duke University and a founding member of the Center for Advanced Hindsight. He is the author of the bestsellers Predictably Irrational, The Upside of Irrationality, and The Honest Truth About Dishonesty -- as well as the TED Book Payoff: The Hidden Logic that Shapes Our Motivations.
Through his research and his (often amusing and unorthodox) experiments, he questions the forces that influence human behavior and the irrational ways in which we often all behave.
Dan Ariely | Speaker | TED.com