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词条 Second-wave positive psychology
释义

  1. Limitations of positive psychology

  2. Existential positive psychology

  3. Second wave positive psychology

      Assumptions    Mission    Importance of dialectical thinking    Incorporating the dark side    The meaning hypothesis    Conclusion  

  4. Leaders

  5. References

{{advert|date=October 2016}}Second wave positive psychology (PP 2.0) is concerned with how to bring out the best in individuals and society in spite of and because of the dark side of human existence through the dialectical principles of yin and yang.[1][2][3][4][5] There has also been a distinct shift from focusing on individual happiness and success to the double vision[6] of individual well-being and the big picture of humanity.[7][8] PP 2.0 is more about bringing out the "better angels of our nature"[9] than achieving optimal happiness or personal success, because the better angels of empathy, compassion, reason, justice, and self-transcendence will make people better human beings and this world a better place. PP 2.0 pivots around the universal human capacity for meaning seeking and meaning making[10] in achieving optimal human functioning under both desirable and undesirable conditions.[2][11] This emerging movement is an inevitable and necessary corrective response to the inherent problems of what has been called "positive psychology as usual".[5]

Limitations of positive psychology

Positive psychology "as usual" has been presented as
the branch of psychology that uses scientific understanding and effective intervention to aid in the achievement of a satisfactory life, rather than treating mental illness. The focus of positive psychology is on personal growth rather than on pathology.
It has been argued that this binary, dichotomous view has fuelled both positive psychology's success and decline.[5] The single-minded focus on positivity has resulted in persistent backlash (e.g., Frawley, 2015 for a recent review).[12] The following criticisms have been leveled against positive psychology by researchers both outside of and within the positive psychology community. These include the "tyranny" of positivity and the lack of balance between positives and negatives;[13][14] failing to cover the entire spectrum of human experiences;[15] failing to recognize the importance of contextual variables;[16] and assuming that the Western individualistic culture represents the universal human experience.[17][18] As a result, various positive psychologists have proposed the need for a balanced perspective.[2][19][20]

Existential positive psychology

In order to correct the limitations of positive psychology, Paul Wong has argued for the need to integrate positive psychology with existential psychology, resulting in "existential positive psychology" (EPP).[21][22] This approach differs significantly from positive psychology "as usual" both in terms of epistemology and content.

EPP favors a pluralistic and holistic approach to research. It is open to insights and wisdoms from both the East and the West and research findings from all sources regardless of the paradigm of truth claims. In terms of content, it explores both people's existential anxieties[23] and their ultimate concerns.[24] Thus, EPP contributes to a broader and more comprehensive understanding of human experiences.

Both existential philosophers and psychologists see life as a series of paradoxes, predicaments, and problems. From this existential perspective,[25] life is also full of striving and sense-making, tragedies and triumphs. The dynamic interplay between good and evil, negatives and positives is one of the hallmarks of EPP. Positives cannot exist apart from negatives, and authentic happiness grows from pain and suffering. This paradoxical view reflects Albert Camus' insight that "there is no joy of life without despair" (p. 56)[26] and Rollo May's observation that "the ultimate paradox is that negation becomes affirmation" (p. 164).[27]

It may be argued that positive psychology is intrinsically existential because it is concerned with such fundamental questions about human existence as: What is the good life? What makes life worth living? How can one find happiness? Positive psychology research on these existential issues without taking into account the existential literature inevitably leads to superficiality or mischaracterization.[5][28]

A comprehensive positive psychology cannot be developed without taking into account the reality of death, the only certainty for all living organisms. However, human beings alone are burdened with the cognitive capacity to be aware of their own mortality and to fear what may follow after one's own demise.[29] However, death awareness may be essential to meaningful living; "though the physicality of death destroys us, the idea of death saves us" (p. 7).[23] Thus, awareness of our finality is indeed an important motivational factor for us to do something meaningful and significant with our lives.

Therefore, EPP advocates that the proper context of studying well-being and the meaningful life is the reality of suffering and death. Researchers who share this view include Bretherton and Ørner,[30] Schneider,[31] and Taheny.[32]

Recently, positive psychologists have recognized that positive psychology is rooted in humanistic-existential psychology, but in practice it continues to distance itself from its heritage because of the alleged lack of scientific research in humanistic psychology.[33][34] A mature positive psychology needs to return to its existential-humanistic roots, because it can both broaden and deepen positive psychology.

Second wave positive psychology

Paul Wong extends EPP to second wave positive psychology (PP 2.0) by formally incorporating the dialectical principles of Chinese psychology,[35] the bio-behavioral dual-system model of adaptation,[36] and cross-cultural positive psychology.[18] Thus, PP 2.0 provides a big tent that allows for multiple indigenous positive psychologies[17] and a much broader list of variables that contribute to well-being and flourishing.

PP 2.0 is necessary, because neither positive psychology nor humanistic-existential psychology can adequately understand such complex human phenomena as meaning, virtue, and happiness. Such deep knowledge can only be achieved by an integrative and collaborative endeavor.[8][10] This calls for a humble science.[37] In other words, PP 2.0 denies that the positivist paradigm is the only way to examine truth claims, especially when we research the profound questions of what makes life worth living.

Assumptions

  1. Human nature has the potentials for both good and evil; thus, self-control of selfish and destructive instincts is a necessary part of cultivating the "better angels of our nature."
  2. Dialectical principles can best integrate positive and negative factors in different contexts.
  3. Meaning offers both the best protection against adversities and existential concerns as well as the best pathway to achieve the good life of virtue, happiness, and significance.
  4. Just as physical health can only be maintained in recognition of the fact that we are living in an environment infected with bacteria and viruses, so the promotion of positive mental health and optimal human functioning must recognize the inevitable dark side of the human existence.
  5. Individual well-being is connected with the common good of humanity.&91;38&93;

Mission

  1. To better the lives of all people and nurture their potentials, regardless of their circumstances and cultural backgrounds.
  2. To repair the worst and bring out the best, with a focus on the human potential for growth.
  3. To integrate negatives and positives to optimize well-being.
  4. To study how global beliefs and values affect people's eudemonic well-being and human functioning.
  5. To minimize or transform the downside of the bright side, and optimize or transform the upside of the dark side.
  6. To cultivate the capacity for meaning seeking and meaning making.
  7. To study how death awareness can contribute to personal transformation.
  8. To develop objective measures of both short-term and long-term well-being for individuals and society.
  9. To enhance well-being throughout the lifespan including the end-of-life stage.
  10. To identify and research a host of variables related to both yin and yang.
  11. To contain and transform evil to serve the common good.
  12. To cultivate inner goodness and develop valid measures of goodness as an outcome.&91;38&93;

Importance of dialectical thinking

Taoist dialectical thinking permeates every aspect of Chinese psychology. Peng and Nisbett showed that Chinese thinking is dialectical rather than binary.[39] Similarly, Sundararajan documents the dialectical co-existence of positive and negative emotions in Chinese people.[40]

Paul Wong's research has also demonstrated that the wisdom of yin and yang operates in many situations. He has argued that Chinese people can hold external and internal loci of control simultaneously.[41] Therefore, their locus of control beliefs can only be a measured by a two-dimensional space with external and internal loci of control as two independent scales. However, dialectic thinking is not unique to Chinese culture. For example, pessimism and optimism can co-exist, resulting in tragic optimism.[42] Death fear and death acceptance can also co-exist, resulting in the multidimensional Death Attitude Profile.[43] Resources and deficits co-exist, as conceptualized in the Resource-Congruence Model.[44] Thus, family can be resources for effective coping, but intra-family conflict can also be a deficit or stressor.[45]

Wong's Dual-Systems Model of approach and avoidance spells out the mechanisms whereby the good life can be achieved in the midst of adversities, not by accentuating the positive and avoiding the negative, but by embracing the dynamic and dialectic interaction between positive and negative experiences.[36] This general bio-behavioral model is also based on the dialectical principle. Dialectical thinking represents a simple but powerful conceptual framework, capable of integrating a great deal of the literature relevant to well-being. Yin represents not only the dark side of life, but also the conservative and passive modes of adaptation, such as acceptance, letting go, avoidance, withdrawal, disengagement, doing nothing, and self-transcendence. Yang represents not only the bright side of life, but also the energetic and active modes of adaptation, such as goal setting and goal striving, problem solving and controlling, and expanding and maintaining territories.

The dynamic balance between positive and negative forces is mediated through dialectical principles. For instance, Lomas and Ivtzan have identified three ways of restoring and maintaining the balance: (a) the principle of appraisal, (b) the principle of co-valence, and (c) the principle of complementarity.[19]

Similarly, Wong identifies four principles of transforming the dark side: (a) becoming wiser and better through the synthesis of opposites, (b) becoming more balanced and flexible through the co-existence of opposites which complement or moderate each other, (c) becoming more aware and appreciative of the after-effects or contrast effect due to the opponent-process, and (d) becoming stronger and more spiritual through self-transcendence.[4]

Thus, the wisdom of achieving the golden mean or the middle way is through the dialectical interactions between yin and yang. These dialectical principles constitute the foundation of PP 2.0 and ensure that the dark side of life serves the adaptive functions of survival and flourishing.

Incorporating the dark side

The dark side refers to more than just challenging experiences, thoughts, emotions, and behaviors that trigger discomfort.[1] It also encompasses existential anxieties and the evitable sufferings in life.[7][42] Apart from existential concerns, the dark side also refers to our Achilles' heel. From Aristotle to Shakespeare, the literature has always recognized the existence of tragic heroes—powerful and successful individuals who are eventually ruined by their own character flaws. As Aristotle said, "A man cannot become a hero until he can see the root of his own downfall." All one's talents, character strengths, and efforts will eventually come to null, with disastrous consequences to oneself and others, when one pays no attention to one's own Achilles heel.[11]

The meaning hypothesis

Paul Wong proposes that the meaning hypothesis[8][10][46] is an overarching conceptual framework for PP 2.0 because it is based on the universal human capacity for meaning making and meaning seeking and the vital role meaning plays in human experience and well-being.[47][48][49] It hypothesizes that meaning is the best possible end value for the good life and offers the best protection against existential anxieties and adversities.

The meaning hypothesis places more emphasis on a fundamental change in global beliefs and values than behavioral change. The "meaning mindset" affirms that life has unconditional meaning and it can be found in any situation.[50] Figure 1 presents a schematic presentation of the meaning mindset.

If one chooses the meaning mindset, one can still find meaning and fulfillment even when failing to complete one's life mission. Thus, there is no failure when one pursues a virtuous and noble mission as one's life goal. A perspective shift to the meaning mindset helps eliminate one main source of human misery related to the striving to achieve material success or worldly fame. Cultivating a meaning mindset may yield better payoff than positive psychology exercises of enhancing happiness and character strengths because the perspective shift reorients one's focus away from egotistic pursuits to self-transcendence and altruism, which benefit both the individual and society.[51][52]

Conclusion

Science is always self-corrective and progressive. PP 2.0 avoids many of the problems inherent in positive psychology "as usual"[5] and opens up new avenues of research and applications. The future of psychology can benefit from integrating three distinct movements—humanistic-existential psychology, positive psychology, and indigenous psychology.

The 21st century belongs to PP 2.0 because of its ability to integrate various sub-disciplines of mainstream psychology and its humble science approach. PP 2.0 is willing to put aside dogmatic epistemological positions in the service of the greater good as some have recommended.[34]

Meaning management of the dialectical principles is sensitive to individual and cultural contexts, but is, at the same time, also cognizant of the common good of humility and self-transcendence. This big picture perspective of PP 2.0 avoids many of the excesses associated with the egotistic pursuits of happiness and success in positive psychology as usual.[7][51]

Leaders

PP 2.0 is spearheaded by Paul Wong from the International Network on Personal Meaning and Saybrook University, and Itai Ivtzan and Tim Lomas from the University of East London (UEL). Wong is teaching a course on PP 2.0 at Saybrook. Ivtzan is the program director along with Tim who is a lecturer & program leader of the UEL Master of Applied Positive Psychology, which has a PP 2.0 orientation.

References

1. ^Ivtzan, I., Lomas, T., Hefferon, K., & Worth, P. (2015). Second wave positive psychology: Embracing the dark side of life. London, UK: Routledge.
2. ^Wong, P. T. P. (2011). Positive psychology 2.0: Towards a balanced interactive model of the good life. Canadian Psychology, 52(2), 69-81.
3. ^Wong, P. T. P. (2015). What is second wave positive psychology and why is it necessary? Dr. Paul T. P. Wong. Retrieved from http://www.drpaulwong.com/what-is-second-wave-positive-psychology-and-why-is-it-necessary/
4. ^Wong, P. T. P. (2016, July). PP2.0 Summit explores the new vistas of second wave positive psychology: How to embrace the dark side to make life better. Positive Living Newsletter. Retrieved from http://www.drpaulwong.com/inpm-presidents-report-july-2016/Z
5. ^Wong, P. T. P., & Roy, S. (in press). Critique of positive psychology and positive psychology interventions. In N. J. L. Brown, T. Lomas, & F. J. Eiroá-Orosa (Eds.), The Routledge international handbook of critical positive psychology. London, UK: Routledge.
6. ^Wong, P. T. P. (2012). From logotherapy to meaning-centered counseling and therapy. In P. T. P. Wong (Ed.), The human quest for meaning: Theories, research, and applications (2nd ed., pp. 619-647). New York, NY: Routledge.
7. ^Wong, P. T. P. (2007). Introduction: A quiet positive revolution. In P. T. P. Wong, L. C. J. Wong, M. J. McDonald, & D. W. Klaassen (Eds.), The positive psychology of meaning and spirituality: Selected papers from meaning conferences (pp. 1-8). Abbotsford, BC: INPM Press.
8. ^Wong, P. T. P. (in press). Meaning-centered approach to research and therapy, second wave positive psychology, and the future of humanistic psychology. The Humanistic Psychologist.
9. ^Pinker, S. (2011). The better angels of our nature: Why violence has declined. New York, NY: Penguin Books.
10. ^Wong, P. T. P. (2015, December). The meaning hypothesis of living a good life: Virtue, happiness, and meaning. Paper presented at the research working group meeting for Virtue, Happiness, and the Meaning of Life Project, University of South Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina. (Funded by the John Templeton Foundation)
11. ^Wong, P. T. P., Ivtzan, I., & Lomas, T. (2016). Good work: A meaning-centred approach. In L. G. Oades, M. F. Steger, A. Delle Fave, & J. Passmore (Eds.), The Wiley Blackwell handbook of the psychology of positivity and strengths-based approaches at work (pp. 0-0). West Sussex, UK: Wiley Blackwell.
12. ^Frawley, A. (2015). Happiness research: A review of critiques. Sociology Compass 9(1), 62-77.
13. ^Held, B. S. (2004). The negative side of positive psychology. Journal of Humanistic Psychology, 44(1), 9-46. doi:10.1177/0022167803259645
14. ^Kashdan, T., & Biswas-Diener, R. (2014). The upside of your dark side: Why being your whole self—not just your "good" self—drives success and fulfillment. New York, NY: Plume. 
15. ^Linley, P. A., Joseph, S., Harrington, S. & Wood, A. M. (2006). Positive psychology: Past, present, and (possible) future. The Journal of Positive Psychology, 1(1), 3-16.
16. ^McNulty, J. K., & Fincham, F. D. (2012). Beyond positive psychology? Toward a contextual view of psychological processes and well-being. American Psychologist, 67(2), 101.
17. ^Chang, E. C., Downey, C. A., Hirsch, J. K., & Lin, N. J. (2016). Positive psychology in racial and ethnic groups: Theory, research, and practice. Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.
18. ^Wong, P. T. P. (2013). Positive psychology. In K. Keith (Ed.), Encyclopedia of cross-cultural psychology (pp. 1021-1026). Oxford, UK: Wiley Blackwell.
19. ^Lomas, T., & Ivtzan, I. (2015). Second wave positive psychology: Exploring the positive–negative dialectics of wellbeing. Journal of Happiness Studies, 17(4), 1753–1768. doi:10.1007/s10902-015-9668-y
20. ^Wood, A. M., & Joseph, S. (2010). The absence of positive psychological (eudemonic) well-being as a risk factor for depression: A ten year cohort study. Journal of Affective Disorders, 122(3), 213-217.
21. ^Wong, P. T. P. (2009). Existential positive psychology. In S. Lopez (Ed.), Encyclopedia of positive psychology (Vol. 1, pp. 361-368). Oxford, UK: Wiley Blackwell.
22. ^Wong, P. T. P. (2010). What is existential positive psychology? International Journal of Existential Psychology and Psychotherapy, 3(1), 1-10.
23. ^Yalom, I. D. (2008). Staring at the sun: Overcoming the terror of death. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.
24. ^Emmons, R. A. (1999). The psychology of ultimate concerns: Motivation and spirituality in personality. New York, NY: Guilford Press.
25. ^Wong, P. T. P. (in press). Existential theoretical framework. In A. Wenzel (Ed.), The SAGE encyclopedia of abnormal and clinical psychology. New York, NY: Sage.
26. ^Camus, A. (1968). Lyrical and critical essays (E. C. Kennedy, Trans.). New York: Knopf.
27. ^May, R. (1981). Freedom and destiny. New York, NY: Norton.
28. ^Brown, N. J. L., & Wong, P. T. P. (2015). Questionable measures are pretty meaningless: Comment on Heintzelman and King (2014). American Psychologist, 70(6), 571-573. doi:10.1037/a0039308
29. ^Yalom, I. D. (1980). Existential therapy. New York, NY: Basic Books.
30. ^Bretherton, R. and Ørner, R. J. (2004) Positive psychology and psychotherapy: An existential approach. P. A. Linley & S. Joseph (Eds.), Positive psychology in practice (pp. 420-430). Hoboken, NJ: Wiley.
31. ^Schneider, K. J. (2010, November 29). Toward a humanistic positive psychology: Why can't we just get along? Psychology Today. Retrieved from https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/awakening-awe/201011/toward-humanistic-positive-psychology-why-cant-we-just-get-along
32. ^Taheny, M. (2015, May 4). Living existential positive psychology. New Existentialists: Saybrook University. Retrieved from http://www.saybrook.edu/newexistentialists/posts/05-04-15/
33. ^Seligman, M. E. P., & Csikszentmihalyi, M. (2000). Positive psychology: An introduction. American Psychologist, 55(1), 5-14. doi:10.1037/0003-066X.55.1.5
34. ^Waterman, A. S. (2013). The humanistic-positive psychology divide: Contrasts in philosophical foundations. American Psychologist, 68, 124-133.
35. ^Wong, P. T. P. (2009). Chinese positive psychology. In S. J. Lopez (Ed.), Encyclopedia of positive psychology (Vol. 1, pp. 148-156). Oxford, UK: Wiley Blackwell.
36. ^Wong, P. T. P. (2012). Toward a dual-systems model of what makes life worth living. In P. T. P. Wong (Ed.), The human quest for meaning: Theories, research, and applications (2nd ed., pp. 3-22). New York, NY: Routledge.
37. ^Templeton, J. (1998). The humble approach: Scientists discover God. Radnor, PA: Templeton Foundation Press.
38. ^Wong, P. T. P. (2016, September). Mapping the contours of positive psychology 2.0. Positive Living Newsletter.
39. ^Peng, K., & Nisbett, R. E. (1999). Culture, dialectics, and reasoning about contradiction. American Psychologist54(9), 741-754.
40. ^Sundararajan, L. (2014). The function of negative emotions in the Confucian tradition. In W. G. Parrott (Ed.), The positive side of negative emotions (pp.179-197). New York, NY: Guilford.
41. ^Wong, P. T. P., & Sproule, C. F. (1984). Attributional analysis of locus of control and the Trent Attribution Profile (TAP). In H. M. Lefcourt (Ed.), Research with the locus of control construct, Vol. 3: Limitations and extensions (pp. 309-360). New York, NY: Academic Press.
42. ^Wong, P. T. P. (2009). Viktor Frankl: Prophet of hope for the 21st century. In A. Batthyany & J. Levinson (Eds.), Existential psychotherapy of meaning: Handbook of logotherapy and existential analysis. Phoenix, AZ: Zeig, Tucker & Theisen.
43. ^Wong, P. T. P., Reker, G. T., & Gesser, G. (1994). Death Attitude Profile – Revised: A multidimensional measure of attitudes toward death. In R. A. Neimeyer (Ed.), Death anxiety handbook: Research, instrumentation, and application (pp. 121-148). Washington, DC: Taylor & Francis.
44. ^Wong, P. T. P. (1993). Effective management of life stress: The resource-congruence model. Stress Medicine, 9, 51-60.
45. ^Wong, P. T. P., & Ujimoto, K. V. (1998). The elderly Asian Americans: Their stress, coping, and well-being. In L. C. Lee & N. W. S. Zane (Eds.), Handbook of Asian American psychology (pp. 165-209). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
46. ^Wong, P. T. P. (2014). From attunement to a meaning-centred good life: Book review of Daniel Haybron's Happiness: A very short introduction. International Journal of Wellbeing, 4(2), 100-105. doi:10.5502/ijw.v4i2.5
47. ^Batthyany, A., & Russo-Netzer, P. (Eds.). (2014). Meaning in positive and existential psychology. New York, NY: Springer.
48. ^Hicks, J. A., & Routledge, C. (Eds.). (2013). The experience of meaning in life: Classical perspectives, emerging themes, and controversies. Dordrecht, NL: Springer.
49. ^Wong, P. T. P. (Ed.). (2012). The human quest for meaning: Theories, research, and applications (2nd ed.). New York, NY: Routledge.
50. ^Wong, P. T. P. (2012c). The meaning mindset: Measurement and implications. International Journal of Existential Psychology & Psychotherapy, 4(1), 1-3.
51. ^Wong, P. T. P. (2016). Self-transcendence: A paradoxical way to become your best. International Journal of Existential Psychology and Psychotherapy, 6(1). Retrieved from http://www.drpaulwong.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/Self-Transcendence_A-Paradoxical-Way-to-Become-Your-Best-2016-Aug-15.pdf
52. ^Wong, P. T. P. (2016d, June). Self-transcendence as the path to virtue, happiness and meaning Paper presented at the research working group meeting for Virtue, Happiness, and the Meaning of Life Project, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois. (Funded by the John Templeton Foundation) (Abstract retrieved from https://virtue.uchicago.edu/page/paul-t-p-wong-june-2016-working-group-meeting-topic)
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