Quality of Life and the Experience of Context
Ankur Betageri

TL;DR
This paper suggests that quality of life should be assessed through sensory and perceptual experiences of environmental factors and meaningful actions, emphasizing relational and networked perceptions over traditional metrics.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach to evaluating quality of life based on perceptual and relational experiences rather than solely on material or freedom-based metrics.
Findings
Quality of life is linked to perception of environmental constellations.
Experience of quality involves relational and networked perception.
Different sensory frequencies influence perceived quality levels.
Abstract
I propose that quality of life can be compared despite the difference in values across cultures when it is experienced at the sensory and perceptual level. I argue that an approach to assessing quality of life which focuses on an individual's ability to organize his or her context by perceiving positive constellations of factors in the environment and his or her ability to achieve valuable acts and realize valuable states of being is more meaningful than the approaches of metrics which focus directly, and often solely, on the means of living and the means of freedom. Because the felt experience of quality of life is derived from a constellation of factors which make up the indivisible structure of a milieu, the experience of quality of life cannot be regarded as a subjective experience. Through the example of how different frequencies, and mixtures of frequencies, of light are perceived…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCategorization, perception, and language
