Envy, Greed, and Jealousy Are Related But Distinct

A consideration of these emotions in decision-making, economic theory, and political ideology

Kevin Ann
5 min readAug 20, 2019

Despite our best attempts to think and act rationally, we humans are creatures of emotion despite how much we value and aspire to rational thought. Accounting for emotions has far-ranging implications in making decisions in our personal lives, in risk-reward contexts such as trading and investing, and in the formulation of models of aggregate human behavior in economics and political ideology. Because we may not be able to fight, think, or act through emotions using sheer will power, we should instead understand them deeply so that we can formulate actions accounting for them or to side-step them.

Envy, Greed, and Jealousy are very powerful emotions that are often muddled to the point they’re used interchangeably, but in fact have distinct meanings.

  • Envy
    Desiring what someone else has.
  • Greed
    Desire something by itself.
  • Jealousy
    Fear of losing something already in possession, involving a third party.

I will consider the distinctions between these, as well as their extensions and relation to economic theory and political ideology.

Preliminary…

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Kevin Ann
Kevin Ann

Written by Kevin Ann

AI/full-stack software engineer | trader/investor/entrepreneur | physics phd