List Books » Authentic Happiness: Using the New Positive Psychology to Realize Your Potential for Lasting Fulfillment
Authors: Martin Seligman
ISBN-13: 9780743222983, ISBN-10: 0743222989
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
Date Published: January 2004
Edition: 1st Free Press Trade Paperback Edition
Martin E. P. Seligman, Ph.D., is the Fox Leadership Professor of Psychology at the University of Pennsylvania, the director of the Positive Psychology Network, and former president of the American Psychological Association. Among his twenty books are Learned Optimism and The Optimistic Child.
In this national bestseller Martin Seligman's most stimulating, persuasive book to date the acclaimed author of Learned Optimism introduces yet another revolutionary idea. Drawing on groundbreaking scientific research, Seligman shows how Positive Psychology is shifting the profession's paradigm away from its narrow-minded focus on pathology, victimology, and mental illness to positive emotion and mental health. Happiness, studies show, is not the result of good genes or luck. It can be cultivated by identifying and nurturing traits that we already possess including kindness, originality, humor, optimism, and generosity.
Seligman provides the tools you need in order to ascertain your most positive traits or strengths. Then he explains how, by frequently calling upon these "signature strengths" in all the crucial realms of life health, relationships, career you will not only develop natural buffers against misfortune and negative emotion, but also achieve new and sustainable levels of authentic contentment, gratification, and meaning.
In his latest user-friendly road map for human emotion, the author of the bestselling Learned Optimism proposes ratcheting the field of psychology to a new level. "Relieving the states that make life miserable... has made building the states that make life worth living less of a priority. The time has finally arrived for a science that seeks to understand positive emotion, build strength and virtue, and provide guideposts for finding what Aristotle called the `good life,' " writes Seligman. Thankfully, his lengthy homage to happiness may actually live up to the ambitious promise of its subtitle. Seligman doesn't just preach the merits of happiness e.g., happy people are healthier, more productive and contentedly married than their unhappy counterparts but he also presents brief tests and even an interactive Web site (the launch date is set for mid-August) to help readers increase the happiness quotient in their own lives. Trying to fix weaknesses won't help, he says; rather, incorporating strengths such as humor, originality and generosity into everyday interactions with people is a better way to achieve happiness. Skeptics will wonder whether it's possible to learn happiness from a book. Their point may be valid, but Seligman certainly provides the attitude adjustment and practical tools (including self-tests and exercises) for charting the course. Agent, Richard Pine. (Sept. 4) Forecast: A first serial in Newsweek, an appearance on Good Morning America and an author tour not to mention Seligman's name recognition as a longtime proponent of positive psychology should help the publisher sell out its first printing of 125,000 copies. Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.
Preface | xi | |
Part I | Positive Emotion | |
1. | Positive Feeling and Positive Character | 3 |
2. | How Psychology Lost Its Way and I Found Mine | 17 |
3. | Why Bother to Be Happy? | 30 |
4. | Can You Make Yourself Lastingly Happier? | 45 |
5. | Satisfaction about the Past | 62 |
6. | Optimism about the Future | 83 |
7. | Happiness in the Present | 102 |
Part II | Strength and Virtue | |
8. | Renewing Strength and Virtue | 125 |
9. | Your Signature Strengths | 134 |
Part III | In the Mansions of Life | |
10. | Work and Personal Satisfaction | 165 |
11. | Love | 185 |
12. | Raising Children | 208 |
13. | Reprise and Summary | 247 |
14. | Meaning and Purpose | 250 |
Appendix | Terminology and Theory | 261 |
Acknowledgments | 265 | |
Endnotes | 271 | |
Index | 305 |