create your own

Can Psychology make us Happier?

73
rate or flag this page

By R.G. San Ramon

What are the Positive Movements in Psychology?

Positive Movements in Psychology: The Humanistic Movement and the Positive Psychology Movement. What do Psychologists do to make me happy?
Positive Movements in Psychology: The Humanistic Movement and the Positive Psychology Movement. What do Psychologists do to make me happy?

There was a time in the history of Psychology that behaviors and mental processes are mostly viewed negatively. The word "Psychology" became almost synonymous to abnormal behavior and mental disorders. However, there is much more in Psychology than eccentric human problems.


Mahatma Gandhi: Human beings have the capacity to be happy.
Mahatma Gandhi: Human beings have the capacity to be happy.

The Humanistic Movement

B. F. Skinner and other behaviorists simplified the human being as acting in response to rewards and punishments. In this light, humans are no more than animals favoring rewards and evading punishments. On the other hand, Sigmund Freud and other psychodynamic psychologists reduced the human being as driven by sex and aggression. Again, humans are no more than animals that strive to live and kill. (For a brief discussion on the Behavioral and Psychodynamic Approaches, consider reading "How do Contemporary Psychologists approach the study of Behavior and Mental Processes?") With these two giants in Psychology, subsequent followers perpetuated the notion that humans are nothing more than specialized animals. The Humanistic Movement claims otherwise. Although they do not reject the existence of animalistic tendencies as present in human beings, Humanists, such as Albert Schweitzer, Mother Teresa, Martin Luther King, Jr. and Mahatma Gandhi, believe that human beings have the capacity to be happy, to love and be loved in return, to sacrifice, to care and be cared for, to have friends, and to go beyond their animal nature. For them, such qualities make humans rightfully called "humans."


Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi: Psychology should focus more on the positive aspects of living.
Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi: Psychology should focus more on the positive aspects of living.

The Positive Psychology Movement

Negativity in Psychology did not only affect the perceived capacity of the human being, it also influenced the conduct of psychological research. In the 1990s, academic journals in Psychology showed marked trend leading towards the search for negative subjects, such as mental disorders and abnormal behaviors. Virtually no research was conducted on the positive aspects of the human being. In response, Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi and Martin Seligman reoriented the "American Psychologist" journal, year 2000 special issue, in the light of the Positive Psychology Movement. The movement advocates that psychological research should also touch on the positive experiences, traits and values of the human being, such as altruism, leadership and love. Today, the movement is reflected in various lines of research in Psychology, such as Parenting, Law and Forensics, Education, Counseling and Therapy.

Want to know more about Psychology? Check out the Psychology FAQ or browse through the list of articles below.

Questions and Comments

RSS for comments on this Hub

andromida profile image

andromida  says:
2 months ago

Very interesting article.keep writing on this topic.I love this subject-psychology.thanks.

R.G. San Ramon profile image

R.G. San Ramon  says:
5 weeks ago

Thank you andromida. I hope I'll be able to publish more.

Submit a Comment

Members and Guests

Sign in or sign up and post using a hubpages account.


optional


  • No HTML is allowed in comments, but URLs will be hyperlinked
  • Comments are not for promoting your hubs or other sites


Recommended Readings

The Handbook of Humanistic Psychology: Leading Edges in Theory, Research, and Practice The Handbook of Humanistic Psychology: Leading Edges in Theory, Research, and Practice
Price: $69.97
List Price: $85.95
A Primer in Positive Psychology A Primer in Positive Psychology
Price: $34.15
List Price: $43.95

Psychology Today - News about Psychology

Psychology Today - Blogs about Psychology

  • Should we give thanks to psychotherapy?

    We at the New Center for Advanced Psychotherapy Studies wondered on this day of thanksgiving if you feel you have been helped at all by psychotherapy and if you do, do you or do you not feel... - 11 minutes ago

  • Is Anybody In There?

    You may have read this week about the case of Rom Houben, the Belgian man who was involved in a car crash in 1983, then diagnosed and treated as comatose for over 20 years, and is now reported to be... - 2 hours ago

  • Thanksgiving Recipes: Relishing Loved Ones and Cranberries

    When your sole surviving parent is in her eighties, you think about thanks in an entirely different way --one day, one holiday, one small blessing at a time. Because you never know whether that... - 3 hours ago

(PHOTO CREDITS)

Happiness by Ninja from ninjaradio.wordpress.com. Mahatma Gandhi by MrWest88 from Photobucket.com. Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi by Jon HardinĀ from The Web 2.0 Generation.

working