Summary
The hypothesis that physical attractiveness is positively correlated with happiness, psychological health, and self-esteem was tested with 211 men and women undergraduates. Physical attractiveness was measured by judges' ratings, while happiness, psychological health (neuroticism), and self-esteem were measured by self-report inventories. Physical attractiveness was found to correlate positively with happiness (r = .37), negatively with neuroticism (r = −.22), and positively with self-esteem (r = .24) for women but not for men (corresponding rs = .09, .03, and -.04, respectively). These results were accounted for by the suggestion that physical attractiveness “buys” more for women than for men, and the most prominent outcomes obtained by physical attractiveness—friends and dates—are of greater value to women undergraduates than men. The superior outcomes obtained by the attractive women made them happy, psychologically healthy, and proud of themselves.