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What is the good life? Positive psychology and the renaissance of humanistic psychology.
138
Citations
48
References
2008
Year
Quality Of LifeEducationHappinessPsychologyWell-being (Positive Psychology)ExistentialismGood LifeHumanismLanguage StudiesPsychological Well-beingHistory Of PsychologyEmotional Well-beingHuman ValueWellness ProgramsPositive PsychologyCultureHumanitiesLife SatisfactionSubjective Well-beingThematic ContentHumanistic PsychologyHumanistic Psychology Overlap
Positive and humanistic psychology overlap in thematic content and theoretical presuppositions, yet positive psychology explicitly distances itself as a new movement, despite the fact that its literature implicitly references its extensive historical grounding within humanistic psychology. Consequently, humanistic psychologists both celebrate diffusion of humanistic ideas furthered by positive psychology, and resent its disavowal of the humanistic tradition. The undeniably close alignment of these two schools of thought is demonstrated in the embracing of eudaimonic, in contrast to hedonic, conceptions of happiness by positive psychology. Eudaimonic happiness cannot be purely value-free, nor can it be completely studied without using both nomethetic and idiographic (i.e., quantitative and qualitative) methods in addressing problems of value, which identifies positive psychology clearly as a humanistic approach, despite its protestations.
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