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those who found satisfaction in
part of the enjoyment of flow is the
important in making work more
pursuits such as sports and games.
sense of being outside everyday
rewarding and meaningful. ■
Mihály
Mihály Csíkszentmihályi was
Csíkszentmihályi remained
Csíkszentmihályi
born in Fiume, Italy (now Rijeka,
at the University of Chicago,
Croatia), where his father was
teaching and developing his
posted as a Hungarian diplomat.
ideas on “flow,” from 1969 to
The family became exiles in Rome
2000, when he was appointed
when Hungary was taken over by
Professor of Psychology and
the Communists in 1948.
Management at Claremont
As a teenager, Csíkszentmihályi
Graduate University, California.
attended a talk given by Carl Jung
in Switzerland, which inspired him
Key works
to study psychology. A scholarship
brought him to the University of
1975
Beyond Boredom and
Chicago; he graduated in 1959,
Anxiety
and received his PhD in 1965.
1990
Flow: The Psychology
While still a student, he married
of Optimal Experience
the writer Isabella Selenga, and in
1994
The Evolving Self
1968 became a US citizen.
1996
Creativity
200
HAPPY PEOPLE
ARE EXTREMELY
SOCIAL
MARTIN SELIGMAN (1942– )
IN CONTEXT
There are three kinds of happy life.
APPROACH
Positive psychology
BEFORE
1950s
Carl Rogers develops
the concept and practice of
The Meaningful
The Good
The Pleasant
Life
—acting
“client-centered” therapy.
Life
—pursuing
Life
—socializing
in the service of
personal growth and
and seeking
1954
Abraham Maslow uses
something greater
achieving “flow.”
pleasure.
the term “positive psychology”
than yourself.
for the first time, in his book
Motivation and Personality.
1960s
Aaron Beck exposes
the weaknesses of traditional
psychoanalytical therapy, and
proposes cognitive therapy.
Social relationships
These
bring
lasting
happiness
,
but this
do not guarantee
AFTER
happiness cannot be
high happiness,
1990
Mihály Csíkszentmihályi
achieved without
but it does not appear
publishes
Flow: The Psychology
social relationships.
to occur without them.
of Optimal Experience
, based
on his research into the links
between meaningful, engaging
activity and happiness.
1994
Jon Kabat-Zinn’s
Wherever You Go
,
There You
W
hile experimental
cognitive therapies still focused
psychology after World
largely on alleviating unhappy
War II became deeply
conditions rather than on creating
Are
introduces the idea of
concerned with the cognitive
and promoting happier ones.
“mindfulness meditation” to
processes of the brain, clinical
Martin Seligman, whose theory of
cope with stress, anxiety,
psychology continued to examine
“learned helplessness” (the spiral of
pain, and illness.
ways to treat disorders such as
acquiring pessimistic attitudes in
depression and anxiety. The new
illnesses such as depression) had
COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY 201
See also:
Erich Fromm 124–29 ■ Carl Rogers 130–37 ■ Abraham Maslow 138–39 ■
Aaron Beck 174–77 ■ Mihály Csíkszentmihályi 198–99 ■ Jon Kabat-Zinn 210
much pleasure as possible,
appeared to bring happiness,
though Seligman found this was
often short-lived. Less obviously,
the good life, or being successfully
engaged in relationships, work,
Good social relationships
and play, gave a deeper, more
are, like food and
lasting happiness. Similarly, the
thermoregulation,
meaningful life, or acting in the
universally important
service of others or something
to human mood.
bigger than oneself, led to great
Martin Seligman
Martin Seligman
satisfaction and fulfilment.
Seligman also observed that
Born in Albany, New York,
Martin Seligman took his
good and meaningful lifestyles
first degree in philosophy at
both involve activities that his
Princeton University in 1964.
colleague Mihály Csíkszentmihályi
He then turned his attention
had described as generating “flow,”
to psychology, gaining a
or deep mental engagement. The
doctorate from the University
led to more successful treatments
pleasant life clearly does not involve
of Pennsylvania in 1967. He
in the 1980s, believed that what
“flow,” but Seligman did find that all
taught at Cornell University,
psychology offered was good, but
the “extremely happy people” he
New York, for three years,
it could offer more. He felt that
studied were also very sociable,
before returning in 1970 to
therapy should be “as concerned
and in a relationship. He concluded
Pennsylvania, where he has
with strength as with weakness;
that “social relationships do not
been Professor of Psychology
as interested in building the best
guarantee high happiness, but it
since 1976.
things in life as repairing the
does not appear to occur without
Seligman’s research into
worst.” Having studied philosophy,
them.” A good and meaningful life
depression during the 1970s
he likened the task of his “positive
may bring
eudaemonia,
but having
led to a theory of “learned
helplessness,” and a method
psychology” to that of Aristotle
a pleasant life as well will intensify
of countering the pervasive
seeking
eudaemonia
—“the happy
whatever happiness you achieve. ■
pessimism associated with it.
life.” Like his philosophical
But after an incident with his
forebears, Seligman found this was
daughter that highlighed his
not a matter of relieving or removing
own innate negativity, he was
things that make us unhappy, but
persuaded that focusing on
of encouraging those things that
positive strengths, rather than
might make us happy—and first he
negative weaknesses, was key
had to discover what they were.
to happiness. Regarded as one
of the founding fathers of
“Happy” lives
modern positive psychology,
Seligman noticed that extremely
Seligman instigated the
happy, fulfilled people tend to get
Positive Psychology Center at
on with others, and enjoy company.
the University of Pennsylvania.
They seemed to lead what he called
Key works
“the pleasant life,” one of the three
Enjoying social events
and the
distinct types of “happy” life that
company of others may not offer deep
1975
Helplessness
he identified, the others being “the
intellectual or emotional satisfaction,
1991
Learned Optimism
good life” and “the meaningful life.”
but Seligman observed that it was an
2002
Authentic Happiness
The pleasant life, or seeking as
essential part of being truly happy.
WHAT WE BELIEVE
WITH ALL OUR HEARTS
IS NOT NECESSARILY
ELIZABETH LOFTUS (1944– )
TH
E TRUTH
204 ELIZABETH LOFTUS
IN CONTEXT
T
oward the end of the
19th century, Sigmund
Freud claimed that the
APPROACH
mind has a way of defending itself
Memory
against unacceptable or painful
BEFORE
thoughts and impulses, by using an
Human remembering
1896
Sigmund Freud proposes
unconscious mechanism that he