
Character Has Become A Front-and-center Topic In Contemporary Discourse, But This Term Does Not Have A Fixed Meaning. Character May Be Simply Defined By What Someone Does Not Do, But A More Active And Thorough Definition Is Necessary, One That Addresses Certain Vital Questions. Is Character A Singular Characteristic Of An Individual, Or Is It Composed Of Different Aspects? Does Character--however We Define It--exist In Degrees, Or Is It Simply Something One Happens To Have? How Can Character Be Developed? Can It Be Learned? Relatedly, Can It Be Taught, And Who Might Be The Most Effective Teacher? What Roles Are Played By Family, Schools, The Media, Religion, And The Larger Culture? This Groundbreaking Handbook Of Character Strengths And Virtues Is The First Progress Report From A Prestigious Group Of Researchers Who Have Undertaken The Systematic Classification And Measurement Of Widely Valued Positive Traits. They Approach Good Character In Terms Of Separate Strengths-authenticity, Persistence, Kindness, Gratitude, Hope, Humor, And So On-each Of Which Exists In Degrees. Character Strengths And Virtues Classifies Twenty-four Specific Strengths Under Six Broad Virtues That Consistently Emerge Across History And Culture: Wisdom, Courage, Humanity, Justice, Temperance, And Transcendence. Each Strength Is Thoroughly Examined In Its Own Chapter, With Special Attention To Its Meaning, Explanation, Measurement, Causes, Correlates, Consequences, And Development Across The Life Span, As Well As To Strategies For Its Deliberate Cultivation. This Book Demands The Attention Of Anyone Interested In Psychology And What It Can Teach About The Good Life.
This handbook investigates the core question of how human character can be systematically defined, measured, and cultivated through the lens of positive psychology. Authors Christopher Peterson and Martin E. P. Seligman, both prominent figures in the field of psychology, lead a collaborative research effort to move beyond vague definitions of character. They present a structured framework that categorizes positive human traits into a measurable taxonomy, arguing that character is not a singular trait but a collection of strengths that can be developed over the life span.
What You Will Find
Experts and academics recognize this work as a foundational text in the field of positive psychology, often citing it as the primary reference for character classification. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which serves as a comprehensive resource for researchers and practitioners alike.
Page Count:
816
Publication Date:
2004-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0198037333
ISBN-13:
9780198037330
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