Publication | Closed Access
Shared Virtue: The Convergence of Valued Human Strengths across Culture and History
600
Citations
18
References
2005
Year
Quality Of LifeMoral PhilosophyEducationHuman ConditionAsian PhilosophyCore VirtuesHappinessCultural StudiesPsychologySocial SciencesWell-being (Positive Psychology)Ethics Of LovePositive TraitsSocial IdentityHuman ValueValued Human StrengthsPositive PsychologyMoral PsychologyCultureSubjective Well-beingSocial AnthropologyCultural Anthropology
Positive psychology needs an agreed-upon way of classifying positive traits as a backbone for research, diagnosis, and intervention. As a 1st step toward classification, the authors examined philosophical and religious traditions in China (Confucianism and Taoism), South Asia (Buddhism and Hinduism), and the West (Athenian philosophy, Judaism, Christianity, and Islam) for the answers each provided to questions of moral behavior and the good life. The authors found that 6 core virtues recurred in these writings: courage, justice, humanity, temperance, wisdom, and transcendence. This convergence suggests a nonarbitrary foundation for the classification of human strengths and virtues.
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