Happiness as a Standard in our Personal Life and in Politics
Buch, Englisch, 161 Seiten, Format (B × H): 153 mm x 216 mm, Gewicht: 348 g
ISBN: 978-3-030-56599-2
Verlag: Springer International Publishing
There is a lot of attention for happiness, but there is also a lot of confusion, about the concept and the nature of happiness. This book wants to reduce this confusion, to make the deliberations and discussions about happiness more productive. A reduction of confusion will also make it easier to assess happiness as a possible standard in our personal life and in politics. Acceptance of happiness as a standard will have positive effects. Acceptance in personal life will make individuals more critical, and less vulnerable for adversity and manipulation. Acceptance in politics will contribute to a better detection and analysis of social-economic problems. Such positive effects are important for well-being. Well-being is usually defined as ‘objective well-being’ by experts, like medical specialists or psychologists. They apply their professional standards like blood pressure or personality characteristics. Happiness, on the other hand, is ‘subjective well-being’ as experienced by the people themselves. This happiness is the appreciation of one’s own life as a whole, and this appreciation is based on standards people have adopted themselves, knowingly or unknowingly. Happiness as subjective well-being, and objective well-being as defined by experts, are complementary. It is important to asses objective and subjective well-being simultaneously, and it is incorrect to ignore one of them.
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Weitere Infos & Material
1. Introduction: an old discussion but a new challenge!.- 2. The concept of happiness as subjective well-being.- 3. The measurement of happiness as an actual phenomenon.- 4. Dualism of happiness; the body and the mind again!.- 5. Affective happiness, or the affective component of happiness.- 6. Evaluative happiness, or the evaluative component of happiness.- 7. The explainability of happiness.- 8. Governments and happiness.- 9. Complications in the interpretation and valuation of happiness.- 10. Happiness as a standard in personal life and in politics.- 11. What if? Some policy-options with happiness as a standard.- 12. Summary of main conclusions and discussion.