Do you like reading history? Well.. history teach you what makes nowadays condition. What makes your environment today, your village, your city, your town, your country, even the world your living today. The history also teach you how people in the past make mistake so that, expectedly, you don't repeat the same mistake as they did in the past. Therefore the history is important. In the smaller scope, history tells you how you werw become you are nowadays. There are lots more advantages to learn

Jumat, 07 Oktober 2016

The Science of Well-Being

The Science of Well-Being
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274
By:"Ed Diener"
"Psychology"
Published on 2009-07-16 by Springer Science & Business Media

In his review of Darrin M. McMahon's book, \u003cb\u003eHappiness: A History\u003c/b\u003e, Jim Holt (2006) \u003cbr\u003e\nremarks, half in jest, that the history of the idea of happiness could be \u003cbr\u003e\nsummarized in a series of bumper sticker equations: happiness=luck (Homeric \u003cbr\u003e\nera), ...

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Major Theoretical Questions Theories about subjective well-being have grown over the past several decades, but have been re ned only slowly as adequate data have been compiled to test them. We can characterize the theories describing happiness along several dimensions. The rst dimension is whether the theory places the locus of happiness in external conditions such as income and status, as many sociological theories do, or within the attitudes and temperament of the individual, as many psychological theories do. Some have maintained that people adapt to all circumstances over time, so that only individual personality matters for producing happiness, whereas others believe that economicandothersocietalfactorsarethedominantforcesinproducingwell-being. Throughout my writings there is a mix of both the internal and external factors that in uence well-being. A second dimension that characterizes scholarship on well-being is the issue of whether the factors affecting well-being are relative or absolute. That is, are there standards used by people at all times and places in judging their lives and in reacting to events? Or are standards dependent on what other people possess, on expec- tions,andonadaptationlevelsbasedonpastcircumstances?Again,thereisevidence supporting the role of both universal and relative standards. People around the globe are probably in uenced by common factors such as friendship versus loneliness, but even these universal in uences on happiness are probably subject to some degree of comparison depending on what the person is used to and what others have. However, some factors might be much more comparative than other in uences, as Hsee, Yang, Li, and Shen (in press) have described.

This Book was ranked 31 by Google Books for keyword Happiness: A History.

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