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in General Factchecking by Newbie (360 points)

Single individuals tend to be happier because they have their own personal independence and freedom with no annoyance of having someone else telling them what to do.

by Newbie (450 points)
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That's an interesting point about single individuals potentially being happier due to their independence and freedom. However, other research indicates that people in healthy, supportive relationships tend to report higher levels of happiness and life satisfaction. Having a partner can provide emotional support, companionship, and a sense of security, which are significant contributors to overall well-being. Ultimately, happiness is subjective and can vary greatly from person to person. It might be beneficial to look at studies that examine how happiness levels change over time for both single individuals and those in relationships to get a more comprehensive understanding.

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ago by Newbie (300 points)

This claim is not universally or inherently true, but rather a nuanced and conditional assertion, as evidenced by both [https://www.thegoodtrade.com/features/living-alone/] and a scientific study from [https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0191886923001319]


While The Good Trade article, with its inherent bias towards promoting empowering lifestyle choices, strongly supports the potential for profound happiness in single life by highlighting benefits like personal freedom, self-discovery, reduced stress, and the ability to cultivate a personalized sanctuary, it implicitly undermines the universality of the claim by focusing solely on these upsides and omitting potential challenges. The ScienceDirect article, functioning as a primary source of empirical data despite its own potential for publication or methodological biases, provides a more complex perspective, suggesting that while a "marriage premium" in happiness often exists, single individuals can achieve comparable or even superior well-being when actively cultivating strong social networks, high autonomy, and purposeful lives. Therefore, while both sources confirm that singleness is a valid and often joyful path, particularly when individuals leverage its unique advantages, neither conclusively proves that single people are inherently happier than partnered individuals; instead, happiness in singlehood is shown to be a dynamic outcome mediated by personal choices and circumstances, rather than a universal default.

Can't be true or false (Opinion, poem, etc.)
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ago by Newbie (220 points)

This article is greatly misleading. Aside from anything, most articles and studies say the opposite. from looking at this data poll from Gallup Poll, which was featured in a CNN article, it seems that being married leads to people being happier. This was done by looking at the marriage percentages, career success, and suicide rates in towns. Towns with fewer marriages tend to have more suicides. This is likely due to them being percentage-wise better off annually do to them having a double income. Not only that, but married people have kids. This gives people a reason to live, which means that if anything, marriage doesn't have much to do with happiness, nor does being single. It's likely purpose and being well off.

Exaggerated/ Misleading
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ago by (140 points)
This is an interesting point, but exaggerative and misleading. This is more of an opinionated sentence rather than factual. I think that this article more so acknowledges that single people can find happiness, not that that they would find more than couples. The article even provides evidence that "people in romantic relationships enjoy greater well-being than singles", which contradicts the claim. Throughout the article, it is emphasized that single people can be happy because there are countless paths to finding joy. Another article I found from The Society of Personality and Social Psychology found that "many single people are just as happy as their coupled peers". Overall, happiness is completely subjective and dependent upon what you want in life.

https://spsp.org/news/character-and-context-blog/walsh-kaufman-single-people-happiness-stereotypes
Exaggerated/ Misleading

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