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Type of bind: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 150.198
EAN num: 9780195188332
Format: Illustrated
ISBN number: 0195188330
Label: Oxford University Press, USA
Manufacturer: Oxford University Press, USA
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 400
Printing Date: July 27, 2006
Publishing house: Oxford University Press, USA
Sale Popularity Level: 24131
Studio: Oxford University Press, USA
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Product Description:
Positive psychology is the scientific study of what goes right in life, from birth to death and at all stops in between. It is a newly-christened approach within psychology that takes seriously the examination of that which makes life most worth living. Everyone's life has peaks and valleys, and positive psychology does not deny the valleys. Its signature premise is more nuanced, but nonetheless important: what is good about life is as genuine as what is bad and, therefore, deserves equal attention from psychologists. Positive psychology as an explicit perspective has existed only since 1998, but enough relevant theory and research now exist to fill a textbook suitable for a semester-long college course.
A Primer in Positive Psychology is thoroughly grounded in scientific research and covers major topics of concern to the field: positive experiences such as pleasure and flow; positive traits such as character strengths, values, and talents; and the social institutions that enable these subjects as well as what recent research might contribute to this knowledge. Every chapter contains exercises that illustrate positive psychology, a glossary, suggestions of articles and books for further reading, and lists of films, websites, and popular songs that embody chapter themes.
A comprehensive overview of positive psychology by one of the acknowledged leaders in the field, this textbook provides students with a thorough introduction to an important area of psychology.
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Rated by buyers
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I confess that I gave up reading "Authentic Happiness" half-way through, so I was not biased toward positive psychology. However, this was a text for a PP coaching class I took, and I liked it a lot -- very clear, straight-forward, easy to understand, full of substantive and interesting research, and even a bit of humor. I found myself looking forward to reading the assignments. My only fuss (which the author says he'll rectify in the subsequent edition) is an inherent testosterone bias, (e.g., a key element of happiness is "winning," expressed in masculine terms rather than the kind of fulfillment that a soccer mom might get from raising great kids). Altogether a good explication of the rationale and value of positive psychology.
Rated by buyers
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When I very first heard of "positive psychology" I thought..."so what is negative psychology supposed to be?" The terminology shouldn't hang you up. Positive psychology is a look a what psychology can be sans the illness orientation. What this means is that you are really studying how people can use their minds without concentrating on how that thing they do with their hair is an obvious sign of their insecurity, their masturbatory tendencies, or their love affair with their anal stage of development. The book has great information but is not written in a stuffy or pretentious way. Without a doubt it is one of the most readable psychology books I've ever had the pleasure of recommending. Even though the author supplies the reader with tons of references to help him in his continued study, for the casual reader this book can easily stand by itself. If you are lucky enough to get this as a text book in college enjoy the course and the professor wise enough to chose this book.
Rated by buyers
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A Primer in Positive Psychology delivers a text full of the details from what has been concept for a decade. With the field of Positive Psychology coming to the point of being a deliverable product to the public, Dr. Peterson frames up a concise text of understandable background on what we are and how positive strategies of behavior throughout the lifetime can benefit all people. This establishes the goal of making Positive Psychology a core life training for students at all levels of education, beginning with primary stages. This textbook format gives parents the tools for themselves and their young adult children to teach themselves the principles of excelling at life, not just surviving it.
Rated by buyers
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At Coaching Toward Happiness and at MentorCoach, we
write about the leading figures in positive psychology
and in coaching and talk to them in live
teleconference interviews. We interviewed
Chris three times. His new book is exceptional.
Here's why:
===================
1. It's The Best.
===================
Okay. This is arguably the best introduction to positive
psychology ever written. It ties all the key issues
together in a compelling way. It provides understanding,
depth, rich resources, and it's fun to read.
=========================
2. It's Reader-Friendly.
=========================
It's a large trade paperback, 314 pages. Rich with fascinating
detail, web sites, movies, overarching explanations of research.
Bad writing makes the reader feel dumb. Good writing makes the
reader feel smart. Chris makes you feel smart.
===================
3. If You Teach.
===================
If you teach positive psychology, you have to use this book. Listen
to the founder of the field: "This is the definitive textbook in
positive psychology. But more than that, it may be the single best
textbook on any subject that I have ever read... (It) both made me
laugh out loud and brought tears to my eyes." -- Martin E. P. Seligman
======================================
4. For the Bright Professional
======================================
It's perfect for the curious, bright professional who's new to
positive psychology and wants to quickly get up to speed. If
you understand The Primer, you'll be ahead of 99% of the people
in your field.
==========================
5. It Sounds Like Chris.
==========================
Conversational and accessible. It reads like he talks. And it
reads like a conversation with someone who's twice won the
honor of best teacher at the University of Michigan.
======================================
6. It Has Tiny Throw-Away Nuggets.
======================================
The words "positive psychology" were very first used, not by Seligman
in 1998, but Maslow in 1954. "...The smiley-face icon was created
for a life insurance company in 1964 by a Massachusetts graphic
artist, who was paid $45 for his creation. Neither the insurance
company nor artist Harvey Bell copyrighted the symbol which
has--perhaps as a result--become extremely popular."
===================
7. The Songs.
===================
Each chapter ends with films and dozens of Chris' favorite, relevant
songs: "Be True to Your School" (Beach Boys); "Get Up, Stand Up"
(Bob Marley & the Wailers), "To Sir, With Love" (LuLu); "I Feel
Good" (James Brown); "My Sweet Lord" (George Harrison). Walking
on Sunshine" (Katrina & the Waves). He admits to being a baby
boomer and knows it shows in his song choice. He also believes
a relevant song is a great way to signal the beginning of a class.
=========================
8. Personal Usefulness.
=========================
You might even find it personally useful. Of the thousands of
suggestions for increasing happiness that have been proffered
in the last fifty years, indeed over the centuries, which have
so far been empirically examined? It goes beyond the headlines
and looks in detail at what the research might really mean for what
you do.
=======================
9. It's Unpretentious.
=======================
In 2003, I sometimes taught a teleclass from Chris' office at Penn.
His entire office consisted of a computer, a bare floor, one table
and chair, and a bookshelf with 15 scattered books. Nothing to
indicate, for example, that he was among the world's 100 most
frequently cited psychologists during the past 20 years.
The Primer is similarly down to earth. Name one other famous academic
who would write this paragraph:
"...some skeptics still believe that positive psychologists miss
the "obvious" point that life is tragic... I disagree but will
not belabor the point except to note that tragedy admits to
gradations. Even if everything sucks, some things suck more
than others, an irrefutable fact given how people actually behave
if not what they say....Whether we label ...preferred circumstances
"positive" or "less sucky" then becomes a matter of semantics (P. 13)."
======================================
10. Find the Tenth Reason Yourself.
Read More
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