幸福
集体主义
个人主义文化
社会心理学
主观幸福感
个人主义
心理学
幸福
政治学
法学
心理治疗师
作者
Brett Q. Ford,Julia Dmitrieva,Daniel Heller,Yulia Chentsova-Dutton,Igor Grossmann,Maya Tamir,Yukiko Uchida,Birgit Koopmann‐Holm,Victoria A. Floerke,Meike Uhrig,Tatiana G. Bokhan,Iris B. Mauss
摘要
Pursuing happiness can paradoxically impair well-being. Here, the authors propose the potential downsides to pursuing happiness may be specific to individualistic cultures. In collectivistic (vs. individualistic) cultures, pursuing happiness may be more successful because happiness is viewed--and thus pursued--in relatively socially engaged ways. In 4 geographical regions that vary in level of collectivism (United States, Germany, Russia, East Asia), we assessed participants' well-being, motivation to pursue happiness, and to what extent they pursued happiness in socially engaged ways. Motivation to pursue happiness predicted lower well-being in the United States, did not predict well-being in Germany, and predicted higher well-being in Russia and in East Asia. These cultural differences in the link between motivation to pursue happiness and well-being were explained by cultural differences in the socially engaged pursuit of happiness. These findings suggest that culture shapes whether the pursuit of happiness is linked with better or worse well-being, perhaps via how people pursue happiness.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI