Materialism: Difference between revisions
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'''Materialism''' is the tendency to believe that consumer goods and services provide the greatest source of satisfaction in life (Belk, 1985), could also explain some of the cultural differences in happiness. Research on materialism and happiness has consistently shown that materialistic people are less happy. | '''Materialism''' is the tendency to believe that consumer goods and services provide the greatest source of satisfaction in life (Belk, 1985), could also explain some of the cultural differences in happiness. Research on [[materialism]] and happiness has consistently shown that [[materialism|materialistic]] people are less happy. It is not a [[fascist]] philosophy. | ||
[[Category:Definitions]] | [[Category:Definitions]] | ||
[[Category:Philosophy]] | [[Category:Philosophy]] |
Latest revision as of 16:19, 7 November 2022
Materialism is the tendency to believe that consumer goods and services provide the greatest source of satisfaction in life (Belk, 1985), could also explain some of the cultural differences in happiness. Research on materialism and happiness has consistently shown that materialistic people are less happy. It is not a fascist philosophy.