Difference between revisions of "Happiness"

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==Gratitude==
 
  
[[Image:grat.gif|right|Gratitude]]
 
 
 
===Reading on the Psychology of Gratitude===
 
 
:My primary source for reading about the Psychology of Gratitude is Emmons and McCullough, '''The Psychology of Gratitude''', Oxford University Press, 2004.  Emmons and McCullough are widely known among gratitude researchers for their pioneering work on the relationship between so-called "gratitude journaling" and elevation in subjective well-being.  In this one volume work, Emmons and McCullough have brought together essays from researchers on a variety of topics related to gratitude, such as gratitude in the history of ideas, in anthropology and biology, and in positive psychology.  A particularly useful chapter is '''Chapter 9: Gratitude and Subjective Well-Being, by Philip C. Watkins.
 
 
===The Gratitude Exercise===
 
 
:The gratitude exercise is based on the original research by Emmons and McCullough in 2003.  See p. 174 of Emmons and McCullough, The Psychology of Gratitude, for a summary of the basic prompt for this journal based research.  A basic gratitude exercise could consist of replicating their research by journaling.  You could carry out the journaling exercise and then write a reflection paper about your experience.  You could turn in a sample of some of your journal entries along with your reflection paper.
 
  
 
==Lecture Notes from the Death Class==
 
==Lecture Notes from the Death Class==

Revision as of 21:40, 30 December 2007

Wiki Pages for Alfino's Happiness Course

This page has a variety of information related to the Happiness Class, taught by Dr. Mark Alfino at Gonzaga University. It is intended to supplement the course website.

Quote of the Month

"As for me, then, I love life, and cultivate it. . . I do not go about wishing that it should lack the need to eat and drink, and it would seem to me no less excusable a failing to wish that need to be doubled; ... nor that we should beget children insensibly with our fingers or our heels, but, rather, with due respect, that we could also beget them voluptuously with our fingers and heels; nor that the body should be without desire and without titillation" Montaigne, Complete Essays, 855




Lecture Notes from the Death Class

Death and Happiness Class