Handbook of Positive PsychologyC. R. Snyder, Shane J. Lopez Oxford University Press, 20/12/2001 - 848 من الصفحات Psychology has long been enamored of the dark side of human existence, rarely exploring a more positive view of the mind. What has psychology contributed, for example, to our understanding of the various human virtues? Regrettably, not much. The last decade, however, has witnessed a growing movement to abandon the exclusive focus on the negative. Psychologists from several subdisciplines are now asking an intriguing question: "What strengths does a person employ to deal effectively with life?" The Handbook of Positive Psychology provides a forum for a more positive view of the human condition. In its pages, readers are treated to an analysis of what the foremost experts believe to be the fundamental strengths of humankind. Both seasoned professionals and students just entering the field are eager to grasp the power and vitality of the human spirit as it faces a multitude of life challenges. The Handbook is the first systematic attempt to bring together leading scholars to give voice to the emerging field of positive psychology. |
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الصفحة
... values and sociocultural forces such as prejudice and oppression. Finally, these terms portray the people who are seeking help as passive victims of intrapsychic and biological forces beyond their direct control who therefore should be ...
... values and sociocultural forces such as prejudice and oppression. Finally, these terms portray the people who are seeking help as passive victims of intrapsychic and biological forces beyond their direct control who therefore should be ...
الصفحة
... values—in particular, the values of society's most powerful individuals, groups, and institutions—and the contextual rules for behavior derived from these values (Becker, 1963; Parker et al., 1995; Rosenblum & Travis, 1996). As McNamee ...
... values—in particular, the values of society's most powerful individuals, groups, and institutions—and the contextual rules for behavior derived from these values (Becker, 1963; Parker et al., 1995; Rosenblum & Travis, 1996). As McNamee ...
الصفحة
... values. Therefore, instead of asking, “How true is this system of classification?” we have to ask, “What do we value? What goals do we want to accomplish? How well does this system help us accomplish them?” Thus, we cannot talk about ...
... values. Therefore, instead of asking, “How true is this system of classification?” we have to ask, “What do we value? What goals do we want to accomplish? How well does this system help us accomplish them?” Thus, we cannot talk about ...
الصفحة
... value differentials, as compared with “neutral” categories, have been shown to enhance still further the perceived ... value, and context (Wright, 1988): If something stands out sufficiently (saliency); and if, for whatever reason, it is ...
... value differentials, as compared with “neutral” categories, have been shown to enhance still further the perceived ... value, and context (Wright, 1988): If something stands out sufficiently (saliency); and if, for whatever reason, it is ...
الصفحة
... values. It seems plausible that a strong value placed on human dignity, for example, would have the potential to exert a significant influence in organizing perception in a way that forestalls the fundamental negative bias. Motivation ...
... values. It seems plausible that a strong value placed on human dignity, for example, would have the potential to exert a significant influence in organizing perception in a way that forestalls the fundamental negative bias. Motivation ...
المحتوى
Authenticity | |
Uniqueness Seeking | |
Humility | |
The Role of Minding in | |
Compassion | |
The Psychology of Forgiveness | |
Gratitude and the Science of Positive Psychology | |
Love | |
The Disposition to Experience Pleasurable | |
Positive Emotions | |
The Social Construction of SelfEsteem | |
The Adaptive Potential of Coping Through Emotional Approach | |
The Positive Psychology of Emotional Intelligence | |
Toward Spiritualizing the Passions | |
The Role of Personal Control in Adaptive Functioning | |
Mindfulness Versus Positive Evaluation | |
Optimism | |
Optimistic Explanatory Style | |
A Member of the Positive Psychology Family | |
The Power of Believing You | |
ProblemSolving Appraisal and Psychological Adjustment | |
Setting Goals for Life and Happiness | |
A Developmental Perspective | |
Its Structure and Function in Regulating Successful | |
Reality Negotiation | |
Authenticity and Positivity in Social | |
Empathy and Altruism | |
The Sources of Moral Motivation | |
Toughness | |
A Role for Neuropsychology in Understanding the Facilitating | |
Integrative Science in Pursuit | |
Toward a Biology of Social Support | |
On the Benefits of Writing or Talking | |
BenefitFinding and BenefitReminding | |
Perceiving Benefits and Growth | |
The Pursuit of Meaningfulness in Life | |
Humor | |
Meditation and Positive Psychology | |
Discovering and Conserving the Sacred | |
Development Prevention | |
Outlook for the 21st Century | |
Creativity | |
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activities adaptive adolescents adults alexithymia American American Psychological Association approach assessment associated attributions Baltes behavior benefitfinding benefits C. R. Snyder catecholamine Clinical Psychology cognitive Cognitive Therapy concept context coping correlated creativity Csikszentmihalyi cultural depression developmental Developmental Psychology Diener disorders dopamine effects emotional intelligence empathy evaluation example experience explanatory style factors feedback feelings focus forgiveness functioning goals gratitude hope theory human important individual differences influence interaction interpersonal interventions Isen Journal of Personality learned helplessness levels measures mental health mood moral motivation negative one’s opioid optimism optimistic outcomes oxytocin parents participants partners people’s Personality and Social perspective positive affect positive emotions positive psychology problems problemsolving appraisal processes psychotherapy reality negotiation relationships resilience responses role Ryff scale self selfefficacy selfesteem selfviews Seligman sense situations Social Psychology specific strategies stress subjective wellbeing Swann therapy thinking traits University Press values Watson wisdom York