the good life broadly and narrowly considered

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THE GOOD LIFE: BROADLY AND NARROWLY CONSIDERED LAURA A. KING JENNIFER EMILLA EELS CHAD M. BURTON

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Page 1: The good life broadly and narrowly considered

THE GOOD LIFE:BROADLY AND NARROWLY CONSIDERED

LAURA A. KINGJENNIFER EMILLA EELSCHAD M. BURTON

Page 2: The good life broadly and narrowly considered

Big Question:

What defines the GOOD life?

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Introduction

• Much of the field of psychology is focused on answering how humans can lead better lives.• Better Life = Good Life• Good Life = An Exemplary Life

• Fulfillment• Moral Character• Physical Health• Success• Excellence

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Introduction

• Conceptions of the “Optimally Functioning Person”• Allport: “healthy, mature person” as someone who possessed a

variety of functional characteristics, including the capacity for close relationships, a positive view of himself or herself, common sense, objectivity about the self and others, the capacity for self-extension, and, perhaps most importantly, a unifying philosophy of life.”

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Introduction

• Conceptions of the “Optimally Functioning Person”• Maslow: “as individuals who maintained a capacity for awe and

peak experiences; who were creative, democratic, and unpretentious; and who possessed a non-hostile sense of humor and a deep compassion for others.”

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Introduction

• Conceptions of the “Optimally Functioning Person”• Contemporary Research: Definition of Good Life remains implicit in

the outcomes chosen to promote.

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Introduction

• We will consider the following questions:• What is this implicit definition of the Good Life• What is the role of positive mental states on in psychology’s approach

to the good life.• What are folk concepts of the good life - how “just plain folk”

approach the important question of what makes a life good. • What is the role of unhappiness in the good life?

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Outline

• Implicit Definitions of the Good Life: The Problem of Happiness• Optimal Functioning: Eudaimonia Revisited• Folk Concepts of the Good Life• The Role of Suffering: When Bad Things Happen to Good

Lives

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Implicit Definitions of the Good Life:The Problem of Happiness

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Implicit Definitions of the Good Life:The Problem of Happiness

• Based on existing literature, it may be difficult to argue with the idea that the psychological notion of the good life is the absence of mental illness.

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• Is good life essentially a happy life?• Psychological well-being, positive affect, feelings of satisfaction, and

so on are common outcomes in a broad range of research areas. • Other goods of life aside from happiness are associated with being

happier.• Alternative constructs thought to be indicative of the good life such

as meaning in life, autonomy, purposeful striving, optimism, and so on, tend to be lent construct validity by their associations with measures of happiness

Implicit Definitions of the Good Life:The Problem of Happiness

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• Happiness appears to be something of the natural state for human beings. • In general, people tend to report themselves as pretty happy. • Race and gender are relative unimportant• Life circumstances are also relatively unimportant

Implicit Definitions of the Good Life:The Problem of Happiness

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• Happiness itself can predict a variety of outcomes, not just an outcome by itself• Not only happy people feel good much of the time, these pleasant

feelings may be associated with a variety of other goods in life. • There may be sound empirical support for the central place of

positive mental states in (at least Western) psychology’s implicit answer to the question, “What makes a life good?”

Implicit Definitions of the Good Life:The Problem of Happiness

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• Happiness might not be “everything”• Ryff (1989): “..the previous literature has been guided by somewhat

narrow conceptions of positive functioning. Central emphasis has been given to short-term affective well-being (i.e., happiness), at the expense of more enduring life challenges such as having a sense of purpose and direction, achieving satisfying relationships with others, and gaining a sense of self-realization.”

• Myers and Diener: A person’s age, sex, race, and income does not tell us whether one is happy.

Implicit Definitions of the Good Life:The Problem of Happiness

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• Are all happy lives good?• Negative outcomes are juxtaposed on the idea that people are

generally happy.• Can happiness alone discriminate between good lives and lives that

are lacking in essential ways.

Implicit Definitions of the Good Life:The Problem of Happiness

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• The role of happiness has been the central question of interest for humanity• Aristotle contrasted the pleasurable life with the good life and

proposed the concept of eudaimonia as an alternative to sheer hedonism.

• Hedonia vs Eudaimonia: Subjective vs Objective• Waterman: Simple Pleasure vs Expression of the Self• Eudaimonia defined as “a striving for perfection that represents the

realization of one’s true potential.” • No effort vs Effort

Implicit Definitions of the Good Life:The Problem of Happiness

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• The role of happiness in the good life is difficult to challenge• Though a lot of variables under happiness are beyond hedonism,

most don’t take effort or realization of potential, but a general sense of feeling good

• No one argues that happiness is the only true good in life• Often happiness is viewed as a good proxy measure for more

complex variables such as intrinsic motivation, flow, and so on.

Implicit Definitions of the Good Life:The Problem of Happiness

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Optimal Functioning: Eudaimonia Revisited

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Optimal Functioning: Eudaimonia Revisited

• A number of constructs meant to capture “optimal experience” incorporate aspects of experience beyond enjoyment.• e.g. Intrinsic Motivation• Has been identified as associated with activities that serve essential

psychological needs of autonomy, competence, and relatedness

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Optimal Functioning: Eudaimonia Revisited

• Self-Determination Theory (SDT): when individuals engage in activity that satisfies their needs for autonomy, competence, and relatedness, they experience genuine happiness, self-esteem, and so on.• Activities directed towards obtaining extrinsic rewards promotes

less fulfilling states.• A good life is a life dedicated to the satisfaction of intrinsic needs• Good days are apparently occupied with such activities.

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Optimal Functioning: Eudaimonia Revisited

• Self-Determination Theory (SDT): when individuals engage in activity that satisfies their needs for autonomy, competence, and relatedness, they experience genuine happiness, self-esteem, and so on.• Activities directed towards obtaining extrinsic rewards promotes

less fulfilling states.• A good life is a life dedicated to the satisfaction of intrinsic needs• Good days are apparently occupied with such activities.

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Optimal Functioning: Eudaimonia Revisited

• Flow (Csikszentmihalyi): involves being optimally challenged by experience.• “In the zone”• the demands of a situation match the individual’s abilities, and the

individual is engaged fully in the act of doing • the person loses self-consciousness and a sense of the passing of

time and enters a different level of experience. • while flow is itself an attractive experience, it involves effort and as

such may not be viewed as preferable to simply goofing off.

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Optimal Functioning: Eudaimonia Revisited

• Positive emotions are strongly associated with experiences of intrinsic motivation• Enjoyment is usually used as a proxy measure for intrinsic

motivation• Short-term positive feelings are often associated with feelings of

flow• Individuals who are generally happy may be more likely to

experience flow even during routine daily activities • The empirical relationship between the conceptually distinct notions

of hedonistic happiness and eudaimonia may not be as strong as Aristotle thought.

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Optimal Functioning: Eudaimonia Revisited

• Other important goods in life• Close interpersonal relationships• Good health• Wisdom• Maturity• Charity• Moral Development• Self-Control• Purposeful Striving• Creativity• Accomplishments

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Optimal Functioning: Eudaimonia Revisited

• Other important goods in life• Some to be seem opposite of hedonism, or may require sacrifice of

happiness• When attained, are often associated with heightened happiness• Happiness serves as a gauge of whether our decisions we’ve made,

activities which we are engaged and so on are indeed the ingredients for a fulfilling life.

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Optimal Functioning: Eudaimonia Revisited

• Consideration of Culture• Life satisfaction in collectivist societies tend to be based also on

societal norms aside from emotional states, i.e. living up to societal standards.

• Dependent on the perception of the self• Individualists: Self as own life as individual• Collectivist: Self in relational terms• Positive affect is significantly correlated with satisfaction in all cultures,

but negative affect is only important among some collectivist societies.

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Optimal Functioning: Eudaimonia Revisited

• Consideration of Culture• Life satisfaction used to be understood as the balance between

positive and negative affect and the evaluation of that balance• In cross-cultural context, life satisfaction has been determined to

have two facets which incorporates cultural norms• Satisfaction in specific life domains• Global satisfaction (propensity to evaluate life positively)

• Related to personality and influenced by cultural norms and practices• Domain satisfaction accounts for within-culture subjective well-

being variability• Positivity accounts for cross-cultural subjective well-being variability

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Folk Concepts of the Good Life

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Folk Concepts of the Good Life

• Folk notions of what makes a life good are valuable sources of information• We can compare these notions with those in the literature• It can help us ground our research in the variables and values that

matter to “real people”

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Folk Concepts of the Good Life

• Defining the Good: Desirability and Moral Goodness• Desirability rating is more straightforward• Evaluation of moral goodness is much more complicated

• Ask the participants whether a person is going to heaven.• This allows the individual to not appear judgmental while making the

ultimate judgment.

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Folk Concepts of the Good Life

• Happiness, Meaning and Money in Folk Concepts of the Good Life• All of three are desirable among participants• Moral goodness of happiness: Not clearly positive

• In Judeo-Christian tradition, the suffering servant is favored to go to heaven, and the Bible encourages individuals to suffer in silence.

• The happy person is one who found contentment and peace, leading a good life, and/or has a clear conscience and has won God’s favor

• Moral goodness of meaning:• Devoting one’s life to a meaningful purpose is considered a moral good

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Folk Concepts of the Good Life

• Happiness, Meaning and Money in Folk Concepts of the Good Life• Wealth: Clearly desirable, at least to the extent that it allows people

to meet the necessities of life• The very wealthy are not much happier• Correlation between wealth and happiness is modest (r=.12)• SDT: valuing of attainment of materialistic goals over organismic needs

is associated with negative outcomes.• Materialistic aspirations might supersede other values depending on

economic / financial conditions• Concern for personal happiness and other aspects of life may be

viewed as luxuries—provided by living in relatively good conditions.

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Folk Concepts of the Good Life

• Happiness, Meaning and Money in Folk Concepts of the Good Life• Wealth: Moral goodness is less than straightforward, with the moral

standing of the pursuit of wealth is less than wholly positive.• It is easier for the camel to go through the eye of a needle, than for a

rich man to enter into the Kingdom of God (Mat. 19:24, KJV)• Weber (1930/1976) suggested that earthly economic success might be

viewed as a sign of God’s grace and, as such, it might serve as a proxy for an individual’s moral standing. The wealthy might be viewed as more likely to go to heaven because God has clearly “allowed” them to enjoy earthly success.

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Folk Concepts of the Good Life

• Happiness, Meaning and Money in Folk Concepts of the Good Life• Wealth: Moral goodness is less than straightforward, with the moral

standing of the pursuit of wealth is less than wholly positive.• A survey showed that many thought Mother Theresa will go to heaven

(79%) followed by Oprah (66%) and Michael Jordan (65%).• This shows that at least for Americans, leading an impoverished life of

dedication to a cause but marked sense of joy as well as having material success are indications of a person’s moral standing in the eyes of God.

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Folk Concepts of the Good Life

• Happiness, Meaning and Money in Folk Concepts of the Good Life• People do recognize the value of happiness and meaning in life and

do not overestimate the importance of money in their evaluations of the goodness of a life.• Initial investigations among folk notions of naïve participants showed

that• A life with high meaning and happiness is most preferred• On meaning has a large effect on moral goodness

• Why so few make choices that reflect this knowledge?

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Folk Concepts of the Good Life

• Love and Work in Folk Concepts of the Good Life• Does it matter where a person enjoys a life full of meaning and

happiness?• Research shows that:

• Both mattered at least for desirability, but a life of relationship fulfillment was judged as more desirable and morally superior than work fulfillment

• Work fulfillment contributed to more positive evaluations of a life only when it was paired with high relationship fulfillment.

• Work fulfillment was largely irrelevant to moral judgments of life.

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Folk Concepts of the Good Life

• Love and Work in Folk Concepts of the Good Life• Does it matter where a person enjoys a life full of meaning and

happiness?• Research shows that:

• Meeting the organismic / intrinsic needs are more likely at the relationship domain than work domain.

• Individuals who experienced more intrinsic need satisfaction work tend to judge the life high in relationship fulfillment more negatively, and vice-versa.

• Even in individualistic samples, it seems that people and relationships that matter, not success.

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Folk Concepts of the Good Life

• Love and Work in Folk Concepts of the Good Life• Though folk concepts jibe well with psychological notions of the

good life, there is a question of application.• More value placed on pursuit of wealth over a unifying philosophy in life• The reasonableness and rationality of life decisions are generally

justified for economic reasons• American workers are spending more time at work.• It seems that people have a sense of what it takes to make a fulfilling

life yet they continue to behave in ways that contradict this intuitions.

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Folk Concepts of the Good Life

• Is The Good Life the Easy Life?• Does the folk concept of the good life imply simply hedonic

pleasure, or does it incorporate effort?• Psychological theories of optimal states require effort and sacrifice.

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Folk Concepts of the Good Life

• Is The Good Life the Easy Life?• Research showed that the place of effort in folk concepts of the good life

depends on the type of effort:• Effort long working hours: Both students and adults preferred the easy life• Effort as engagement in resource depleting activity: Students rated a life of

effort higher and morally superior. Adults preferred an easy but meaningful life.

• Effort as chosen effortful engagement: Hard life was rated as more desirable and morally superior.

• For participants, a life is more meaningful if it included difficult work accompanied by joy

• People who have a happy life with little meaning as most likely to be judged as going to hell.

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Folk Concepts of the Good Life

• Is The Good Life the Easy Life?• The role of hard work in the good life is difficult to appreciate• Palatability increases if paired with positive emotion• Folk concepts of the good life only incorporate hard work when that

work is operationalized as unrealistically easy.

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Folk Concepts of the Good Life

• Is The Good Life the Easy Life?• People have an inkling that the good life might be a difficult life, but

generally think that it is a happy, meaningful one. Such a conception of the good life seems to imply that the good life is lived during times of contentment and enjoyment

• Yet, if our notions of the good life are to incorporate whole lives, they must not be limited to sun-filled weekends but include rainy days and Mondays as well.

• A good life should include all experiences

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The Role of Suffering:When Bad Things Happen to Good Lives

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The Role of Suffering:When Bad Things Happen to Good Lives

• What is the place of suffering or difficult times in the good life?• Negative experiences motivates us to search meaning, to make

sense, to find something good• Looking beyond negative events are related to enhanced

adjustment and health benefits• Coping might not just lead to a return to happiness but to more

significant changes in the person and in the meaning of happiness itself.

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The Role of Suffering:When Bad Things Happen to Good Lives

• What is the place of suffering or difficult times in the good life?• Maturity - include the idea that the person is made more complex

as a result of the maturation process • experiences with difficult life circumstances can foster the process

of development • Assimilation and Accommodation in driving personality

development• The outcome of accommodative process is a new way of existing in

the world.• Personality development nor measure of accommodation are

related to measures of happiness

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The Role of Suffering:When Bad Things Happen to Good Lives

• What is the place of suffering or difficult times in the good life?• Maturity - is defined by the struggle to grasp the complexities of life

and of one’s place in the world of meaning.

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A Happy Immature Personone who is generally content but who has a fairly simple view of

himself or herself and the world.

A Happy Mature Personone who has grappled with life’s difficult circumstances and come to a sophisticated, complex view

of self and world but who has also retained a capacity for joy

and a sense of optimism.

A Unhappy Immature Person

one who is generally unhappy and who sees the world and

himself or herself in very straightforward terms.

A Unhappy Immature Person

one who has confronted life’s difficulties and come to

experience the world in very complex ways but who has,

perhaps, as a result, become overwhelmed by complexity or who has been rendered cynical

by the vicissitudes of life.

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In Conclusion:A Multitude of Best Lives

• There may not be one good life but rather a multitude of potentially good lives.

• It is difficult to argue with the goodness of the variety of lives that we encounter in the world every day

• The value placed on any one outcome must be viewed in the context of other important goods in life

• There are many paths to the life well lived, and some of the flagstones likely to be found along these paths include happiness, meaning, effortful engagement, relationships, maturity, and even difficult times.

• The precise layout of these many components on any given person’s path varies according to his or her unique collection of dispositions, experiences, and cultural context.