幸福是什么

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Happiness
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"Happy" and "Happily" redirect here. For other uses, see Happy (disambiguation).
"Jolly" redirects here. For other uses, see Jolly (disambiguation).
For other uses, see Happiness (disambiguation).

The smiley face is a well-knownsymbol of happiness.
Happiness is a state of mind or feeling characterized by contentment, love, satisfaction, pleasure, or joy.[1] A variety of biological, psychological, religious, and philosophical approaches have striven to define happiness and identify its sources.
While direct measurement of happiness presents challenges, tools such as The Oxford Happiness Questionnaire have been developed by researchers. Positive psychology researchers use theoretical models that include describing happiness as consisting of positive emotions and positive activities, or that describe three kinds of happiness: pleasure, engagement, and meaning.
Research has identified a number of attributes that correlate with happiness: relationships and social interaction,extraversion, marital status, employment, health, democratic freedom, optimism, endorphins released through physical exercise and eating chocolate, religious involvement, income and proximity to other happy people.[citation needed]
Philosophers and religious thinkers often define happiness in terms of living a good life, or flourishing, rather than simply as an emotion. Happiness in this older sense was used to translate the Greek Eudaimonia, and is still used in virtue ethics.
Happiness economics suggests that measures of public happiness should be used to supplement more traditional economic measures when evaluating the success of public policy.
Contents
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·                                1 Scientific views
o                                       1.1 Biological approach
o                                       1.2 Positive psychology
o                                       1.3 Research findings
§                                                1.3.1 Happiness in social networks
§                                                1.3.2 Aging and happiness
§                                                1.3.3 Other correlates
·                                2 Religion and happiness
o                                       2.1 Research findings
o                                       2.2 Religious perspectives
§                                                2.2.1 Buddhism
§                                                2.2.2 Catholicism
·                                3 Philosophical views
·                                4 Economic views
·                                5 See also
·                                6 References
·                                7 Further reading
·                                8 External links
Scientific views
Biological approach
The evolutionary perspective offers an alternative approach to understand what happiness or quality of life is about. Briefly, the questions to be answered are: What features are included in the brain that allow humans to distinguish between positive and negative states of mind, and how do these features improve humans' ability to survive and reproduce? Answering these questions points towards an understanding of what happiness is about and how to best exploit the capacities of the brain with which humans are endowed. The perspective is presented in detail by the evolutionary biologist Bjørn Grinde in his book Darwinian Happiness, as well as in a more formal way.[2]
Positive psychology
Main article: Positive psychology


Martin Seligman asserts that "pleasures of the moment" typically involve external stimulus.[3] Above, A man laughs as he attempts to balance three birds on himself.
Research findings


Simple exercise, such as running, is cited as key to feeling happy.[4]
Some researchers, such as David T. Lykken, have found that about 50% of one's happiness depends on one's genes, based on studying identical twins, whose happiness is 50% correlated even when growing up in different houses.[5] About 10% to 15% is a result of various measurable life circumstances variables, such as socioeconomic status, marital status, health, income, sex[6] and others. The remaining 40% is a combination of unknown factors and the results of actions that individuals deliberately engage in to become happier. These actions may vary between persons; extroverts, for example, may benefit from placing themselves in situations involving large amounts of human interaction. Also, exercise has been shown to increase one's level of momentary subjective well-being significantly.[4]
Michael Argyle developed the Oxford Happiness Questionnaire[7] as a broad measure of psychological well-being. This has been criticized as an aggregate of self-esteem, sense of purpose, social interest and kindness, sense of humorand aesthetic appreciation.[8]
Though it may be impossible to achieve any comprehensive measure of happiness objectively, some physiological correlates to happiness can be measured through a variety of techniques. Stefan Klein, in his book The Science of Happiness, links the dynamics of neurobiological systems (i.e., dopaminergic, opiate) to the concepts and findings of positive psychology and social psychology.[9]
Happiness in social networks
Human relationships are consistently found to be the most important correlation with human happiness.
A widely-publicized study from 2008 in the British Medical Journal reported that happiness in social networks may spread from person to person.[10] Researchers followed nearly 5000 individuals for 20 years in the long-standingFramingham Heart Study and found clusters of happiness and unhappiness that spread up to 3 degrees of separation on average. Happiness tended to spread through close relationships like friends, siblings, spouses, and next-door neighbors, and the researchers reported that happiness spread more consistently than unhappiness through the network. Moreover, the structure of the social network appeared to have an impact on happiness, as people who were very central (with many friends and friends of friends) were significantly more likely to be happy than those on the periphery of the network. Overall, the results suggest that happiness might spread through a population like a virus.[11][12]
Aging and happiness
Research in the US has found that older Americans are generally happier than younger adults. The effect does not appear to be generational, because longitudinal research found that happiness increased over time for the older people who were studied. While older individuals reported more health problems, they reported fewer problems overall. Young adults reported more anger, anxiety, depression, financial problems, troubled relationships and career stress.[13]
Other correlates
Studies are contradictory as to whether parents are more likely to report being happier than non-parents.[14][15][16] One study found having up to three children increased happiness among married couples, but not among other groups with children.[16]
Happiness is also correlated with the ability to "rationalize or explain" social and economic inequalities.[17]
One American study found that people were happier after spending money on experiences, rather than physical things.[18] Envy is believed to produce unhappiness.
Religion and happiness
Research findings


Joy, tacuinum sanitatiscasanatensis (XIV century)
There is now extensive research suggesting that religious people are happier and less stressed.[19][20] It is not clear, however, whether this is because of the social contact and support that result from religious activities, the greater likelihood of behaviors related to good health (such as less substance abuse), indirect forms of psychological and social activity such as optimism and volunteering, psychological factors such as "reason for being," learned coping strategies that enhance one's ability to deal with stress, or some combination of these and/or other factors.[21][22][23][24][25]
Surveys by Gallup, the National Opinion Research Center and the Pew Organization conclude that spiritually committed people are twice as likely to report being "very happy" than the least religiously committed people.[26] An analysis of over 200 social studies contends that "high religiousness predicts a lower risk of depression and drug abuse and fewer suicide attempts, and more reports of satisfaction with sex life and a sense of well-being,"[27] and a review of 498 studies published in peer-reviewed journals concluded that a large majority of them showed a positive correlation between religious commitment and higher levels of perceived well-being and self-esteem and lower levels ofhypertension, depression, and clinical delinquency.[28][29] A meta-analysis of 34 recent studies published between 1990 and 2001 found that religiosity has a salutary relationship with psychological adjustment, being related to less psychological distress, more life satisfaction, and better self-actualization.[30] Finally, a recent systematic review of 850 research papers on the topic concluded that "the majority of well-conducted studies found that higher levels of religious involvement are positively associated with indicators of psychological well-being (life satisfaction, happiness, positive affect, and higher morale) and with less depression, suicidal thoughts and behavior, drug/alcohol use/abuse."[31]
Religious perspectives
Buddhism
Happiness forms a central theme of Buddhist teachings. For ultimate freedom from suffering, the Noble Eightfold Path leads its practitioner to Nirvana, a state of everlasting peace. Ultimate happiness is only achieved by overcoming craving in all forms. More mundane forms of happiness, such as acquiring wealth and maintaining good friendships, are also recognized as worthy goals for lay people (see sukha). Buddhism also encourages the generation ofloving kindness and compassion, the desire for the happiness and welfare of all beings.[32][33] According to the Buddha, "Mind is the forerunner of states of existence. Mind is chief, and (those states) are caused by the mind. If one speaks and acts with a pure mind, surely happiness will follow like one's own shadow!" In Buddhism, the third of the Four Noble Truths states "to eliminate suffering, eliminate craving," thus establishing happiness as beyond material and emotional possession and attainable only through an attentive practice leading to extinguishing of craving and aversion.[34] In SGI Buddhismhappiness is obtained by getting yourself aligned with the universe by chanting Nam-myho-renge-kyo to overcome your sufferings and that of others. It teaches that one must never look outside of oneself for happiness.
Catholicism
In Catholicism, the ultimate end of human existence consists in felicity (Latin equivalent to the Greek eudaimonia), or "blessed happiness", described by the thirteenth-century philosopher-theologian Thomas Aquinas as a Beatific Vision of God's essence in the next life.[35] According to Augustine'sConfessions, he lived much of his life without God. He sinned much and recognized his sinfulness. As a youth, he sinned for its own sake, and later, in the pursuit of a perceived good. When he lost a dear friend to death, it troubled him greatly, and he turned to God for answers. He turned to God to find true happiness and was converted to Christianity. He found that true happiness can only come from a relationship with God and appreciating God's creation for His sake, not its own.
Philosophical views
The Chinese Confucian thinker Mencius, who 2300 years ago sought to give advice to the ruthless political leaders of the warring states period, was convinced that the mind played a mediating role between the "lesser self" (the physiological self) and the "greater self" (the moral self) and that getting the priorities right between these two would lead to sagehood. He argued that if we did not feel satisfaction or pleasure in nourishing one's "vital force" with "righteous deeds", that force would shrivel up (Mencius,6A:15 2A:2). More specifically, he mentions the experience of intoxicating joy if one celebrates the practice of the great virtues, especially through music.[36]
Al-Ghazali (1058–1111) the Muslim Sufi thinker wrote the Alchemy of Happiness, a manual of spiritual instruction throughout the Muslim world and widely practiced even now.
About one hundred years later, the Hindu thinker Patanjali, author of the Yoga Sutras, wrote quite exhaustively on the psychological and ontological roots of bliss.[37]
In the Nicomachean Ethics, written in 350 B.C.E., Aristotle stated that happiness (also being well and doing well) is the only thing that humans desire for its own sake, unlike riches, honor, health or friendship. He observed that men sought riches, or honor, or health not only for their own sake but also in order to be happy. Note that eudaimonia, the term we translate as "happiness", is for Aristotle an activity rather than an emotion or a state.[38] Happiness is characteristic of a good life, that is, a life in which a person fulfills human nature in an excellent way. People have a set of purposes which are typically human: these belong to our nature. The happy person is virtuous, meaning they have outstanding abilities and emotional tendencies which allow him or her to fulfill our common human ends. For Aristotle, then, happiness is "the virtuous activity of the soul in accordance with reason": happiness is the practice of virtue.
Many ethicists make arguments for how humans should behave, either individually or collectively, based on the resulting happiness of such behavior.Utilitarians, such as John Stuart Mill and Jeremy Bentham, advocated the greatest happiness principle as a guide for ethical behavior.
Economic views
Main article: Happiness economics
See also: Easterlin paradox
Common market health measures such as GDP and GNP have been used as a measure of successful policy. On average richer nations tend to be happier than poorer nations, but this effect seems to diminish with wealth.[39][40] This has been explained by the fact that the dependency is not linear but logarithmic, i.e., the same percentual increase in the GNP produces the same increase in happiness for wealthy countries as for poor countries.[41][42][43][44]
Economic freedom correlates strongly with happiness[45] while social security not at all,[46] and socialist East European countries were less happy than Western ones, even less happy than other equally poor countries[46].
It has been argued that happiness measures could be used not as a replacement for more traditional measures, but as a supplement.[47] According to professor Edward Glaeser, people constantly make choices that decrease their happiness, because they have also more important aims. Therefore, the government should not decrease the alternatives available for the citizen by patronizing them but let the citizen keep a maximal freedom of choice.[48]
It has been argued that happiness at work is the one of the driving forces behind positive outcomes at work, rather than just being a resultant product.[49]
See also
§                    Hedonic treadmill
§                    Paradox of hedonism
§                    Functional Happiness
References
1.     ^ Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary (accessed 2008-Dec-23)
2.     ^ Grinde, Bjørn (2002). "Happiness in the perspective of evolutionary psychology". Journal of Happiness Studies 3: 331–354. doi:10.1023/A:1021894227295.
3.     ^ Seligman, M.E.P. (2004). Can Happiness be Taught?. Daedalus journal, Spring 2004.
4.      ^ a b Best Benefit of Exercise? Happiness, Robin Loyd, Fox News, May 30, 2006.
5.     ^ Sonja Lyubomirsky, David Schkade and Kennon M. Sheldon, "Pursuing Happiness: The Architecture of Sustainable Change," Review of General Psychology, Vol. 9, No. 2, 111–131, 2005
6.     ^ Nber.org
7.     ^ Oxford Happiness Questionnaire by Michael Argyle and Peter Hills, a survey of current level of happiness. See also discussion in Hills, P., & Argyle, M. (2002). The Oxford Happiness Questionnaire: a compact scale for the measurement of psychological well-being. Personality and Individual Differences, 33, 1073–1082.
8.     ^ The approach has been criticized as overlapping too much with related concepts, and for lacking a theoretical model of happiness. Kashdan, Todd B. (2004). "The assessment of subjective well-being (issues raised by the Oxford Happiness Questionnaire)". Personality and Individual Differences 36: 1225–1232. doi:10.1016/S0191-8869(03)00213-7.
9.     ^ Klein, Stefan (2006). The Science of Happiness. Marlowe & Company. ISBN 1-56924-328-X.
10.  ^ James H. Fowler and Nicholas A. Christakis (3 January 2009). "Dynamic Spread of Happiness in a Large Social Network: Longitudinal Analysis Over 20 Years in the Framingham Heart Study" (PDF). British Medical Journal 338 (768): a2338. doi:10.1136/bmj.a2338.
11.  ^ Belluck, Pam (December 5, 2008). "Strangers May Cheer You Up, Study Says". New York Times. Retrieved 2010-04-10.
12.  ^ Rob Stein, "Happiness Can Spread Among People Like a Contagion, Study Indicates," The Washington Post, December 5, 2008, Page A08
13.  ^ Vedantam, Shankar (2008-07-14). "Older Americans May Be Happier Than Younger Ones". The Washington Post.
14.  ^ "The joys of parenthood". The Economist. 2008-03-27.
15.  ^ Brooks, Arthur C. (2008). Gross National Happiness: Why Happiness Matters for America -- and How We Can Get More of It. Basic Books. ISBN 978-0465002788.
16.   ^ a b SmartPlanet.com
17.  ^ Bryner, Jeanna. "Conservatives Happier Than Liberals". LiveScience.com. Retrieved 2008-06-18.
18.  ^ NPR.org
19.  ^ Rudin, Mike (2006-04-30). "The science of happiness". BBC.
20.  ^ "The New Science of Happiness". Time.
21.  ^ Clinical Implications of Research on Religion, Spirituality, and Mental Health. Marilyn Baetz & John Toews. La Revue canadienne de psychiatrie, vol 54, no 5, mai 2009
22.  ^ Ellison, C.G. Religious involvement, social ties, and social support in a southeastern community. Journal of the Scientific Study of Religion 1994;33:46–61.
23.  ^ McCullough, M.E. & Larson, D.B. Religion and depression: a review of the literature. Twin Res. 1999;2:126–136.
24.  ^ Strawbridge, W.J., Shema, S.J., Cohen, R.D., et al. Religious attendance increases survival by improving and maintaining good health behaviors, mental health, and social relationships. Ann Behav Med. 2001;23:68–74.
25.  ^ Burris, C.T. Religious Orientation Scale. In: Hill, P.C. & Hood, R.W. Jr., editors. Measures of religiosity. Birmingham (AL): Religious Education Press; 1999. p 144–153.
26.  ^ Is Religion Dangerous? p156, citing David Myers The Science of Subjective Well-Being Guilford Press 2007
27.  ^ Smith, Timothy; Michael McCullough, and Justin Poll (2003). "Religiousness and Depression: Evidence for a Main Effect and Moderating Influence of Stressful Life Events".Psychological Bulletin 129 (4): 614–36. doi:10.1037/0033-2909.129.4.614. PMID 12848223.
28.  ^ Bryan Johnson & colleagues at the University of Pennsylvania (2002)
29.  ^ Is Religion Dangerous? cites similar results from the Handbook of Religion and Mental Health Harold Koenig (ed.) ISBN 978-0124176454
30.  ^ Hackney, Charles H; Glenn S. Sanders (2003). "Religiosity and Mental Health: A Meta–Analysis of Recent Studies". Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 42 (1): 43–55. doi:10.1111/1468-5906.t01-1-00160.
31.  ^ Moreira-Almeida, Alexander; Francisco Lotufo Neto, and Harold G. Koenig (September 2006). "Religiousness and mental health: a review". Rev. Bras. Psiquiatr. [serial on the Internet] 28 (3): 242–250.
32.  ^ (see brahmavihara)
33.  ^ Bhikkhu, Thanissaro (1999). "A Guided Meditation".
34.  ^ Bhikkhu Nanamoli (1995). in Bhikkhu Bodhi: "The Middle Length Discourses of the Buddha: A New Translation of the Majjhima Nikaya"
35.  ^ Aquinas, Thomas. "Question 3. What is happiness". Summa Theologiae.
36.  ^ Chan, Wing-tsit (1963). A Source Book in Chinese Philosophy. Princeton, NJ, US: Princeton University Press.
37.  ^ Levine, Marvin (2000). The Positive Psychology of Buddhism and Yoga : Paths to a Mature Happiness. Lawrence Erlbaum. ISBN 0805838333.
38.  ^ Eudaimonia (Greek: ε?δαιμον?α) is a classical Greek word commonly translated as 'happiness'. Etymologically, it consists of the word "eu" ("good" or "well being") and "daimōn" ("spirit" or "minor deity", used by extension to mean one's lot or fortune).
39.  ^ Frey, Bruno S.; Alois Stutzer (December 2001). Happiness and Economics. Princeton University Press.
40.  ^ "In Pursuit of Happiness Research. Is It Reliable? What Does It Imply for Policy?". The Cato institute. 2007-04-11.
41.  ^ Wealth and hapiness revisited Growing wealth of nations does go with greater happiness
42.  ^ Leonhardt, David (2008-04-16). "Maybe Money Does Buy Happiness After All". The New York Times. Retrieved 2010-04-10.
43.  ^ Economic Growth and Subjective Well-Being: Reassessing the Easterlin Paradox
44.  ^ Boston.com
45.  ^ In Pursuit of Happiness Research. Is It Reliable? What Does It Imply for Policy? The Cato institute. April 11, 2007
46.   ^ a b The Scientist's Pursuit of Happiness, Policy, Spring 2005.
47.  ^ Weiner, Eric J. (2007-11-13). "Four months of boom, bust, and fleeing foreign credit". Los Angeles Times.
48.  ^ Coercive regulation and the balance of freedom, Edward Glaeser, Cato Unbound 11.5.2007
49.  ^ Boehm, J K.; S Lyubomirsky (February 2008). Journal of Career Assessment. Sage.
§                     Boehm, J K. & S. Lyubomirsky, Journal of Career Assessment. Vol 16(1), Feb 2008, 101-116.
§                    C. Robert Cloninger, Feeling Good: The Science of Well-Being, Oxford, 2004.
§                    McMahon, Darrin M., Happiness: A History, Atlantic Monthly Press, November 28, 2005. ISBN 0871138867
§                     McMahon, Darrin M., The History of Happiness: 400 B.C. - A.D. 1780, Daedalus journal, Spring 2004.
§                    Daniel Gilbert, Stumbling on Happiness, Knopf, 2006.
§                     Hills, P., & Argyle, M. (2002). "Psychological Wellbeing", The Oxford Happiness Questionnaire: a compact scale for the measurement of psychological well-being. Personality and Individual Differences, 33, 1073–1082.
§                    Koenig HG, McCullough M, & Larson DB. Handbook of religion and health: a century of research reviewed (see article). New York: Oxford University Press; 2001.
§                    Barbara Ann Kipfer, 14,000 Things to Be Happy About, Workman, 1990/2007, ISBN 978-0761147213.
§                    Stefan Klein, The Science of Happiness, Marlowe, 2006, ISBN 1-56924-328-X.
§                    Richard Layard, Happiness: Lessons From A New Science, Penguin, 2005, ISBN 978-0-141-01690-0.
§                     David G. Myers, Ph. D., The Pursuit of Happiness: Who is Happy—and Why, William Morrow and Co., 1992, ISBN 0-688-10550-5.
§                     Martin E.P. Seligman, Ph. D., Authentic Happiness, Free Press, 2002, ISBN 0-7432-2298-9.
§                    W?adys?aw Tatarkiewicz, Analysis of Happiness, The Hague, Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 1976
Further reading
§                     Journal of happiness studies: an interdisciplinary forum on subjective well-being, International Society for Quality-of-Life Studies (ISQOLS), quarterly since 2000, also online
§                     Carol Graham "Happiness Around the World: The Paradox of Happy Peasants and Miserable Millionaires", 2010
§                     W. Doyle Gentry "Happiness for dummies", 2008
§                     Jimmy DeMesa, M.D. "BeHappy!: Your Guide to the Happiest Possible Life", 2006
§                     Eric G. Wilson "Against happiness", 2008
§                     Sonja Lyubomirsky "The how of happiness", 2007
§                     Niek Persoon "Happiness doesn't just happen", 2006
§                     Richard Layard "Happiness", 2005
§                    Desmond Morris "The nature of happiness", 2004
§                     Gregg Easterbrook "The progress paradox - how life gets better while people feel worse", 2003
§                     Ben Renshaw "The secrets of happiness", 2003
§                    Martin E.P. Seligman "Authentic happiness", 2002
§                     Alexandra Stoddard "Choosing happiness - keys to a joyful life", 2002
§                     Robert Holden "Happiness now!", 1998
§                     Joop Hartog & Hessel Oosterbeek "Health, wealth and happiness", 1997
§                     Ruut Veenhoven "Bibliography of happiness - world database of happiness : 2472 studies on subjective appreciation of life", 1993
§                     Neil Kaufman "Happiness is a choice", 1991
§                     Michael W. Eysenck "Happiness - facts and myths", 1990
§                     Lynne McFall "Happiness", 1989
§                     Michael Argyle "The psychology of happiness", 1987
§                     Ruut Veenhoven "Conditions of happiness", 1984
§                     Elizabeth Telfer "Happiness : an examination of a hedonistic and a eudaemonistic concept of happiness and of the relations between them...", 1980
§                     Norman M. Bradburn "The structure of psychological well-being", 1969
§                    Bertrand Russell "The conquest of happiness", orig. 1930 (many reprints)
§                     James Mackaye "Economy of happiness", 1906
§                    Sara Ahmed, "The Promise of Happiness", 2010
§                    Walking Into the Light, "Functional Happiness: A Model for an Inspired Life", 2010
External links
Find more about Happiness on Wikipedia's sister projects:
 Definitions from Wiktionary
 Textbooks from Wikibooks
 Quotations from Wikiquote
 Source texts from Wikisource
 Images and media from Commons
 News stories from Wikinews
 Learning resources from Wikiversity
§                    History of Happiness - concise survey of influential theories
§                    The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry "Pleasure" - ancient and modern philosophers' and neuroscientists' approaches to happiness
§                    The World Database of Happiness - a register of scientific research on the subjective appreciation of life.
§                    Walking Into the Light - Website dedicated to programs and education that promote happiness
§                    Online Happiness Scale - Psychological online scale measuring happiness and quality of life.
§                    Srikumar Rao: Plug into your hard-wired happiness - Video of a short lecture by Srikumar Rao on how to be happy
§                    Happiness is the Appreciation of Beauty - Website testing this theorem by example