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Ethics and Eudaimonic Well-Being

2016
Happiness and well-being are concepts with an evaluative dimension, so happiness research must come to terms with this evaluative content and cannot possibly remain value-free. The recent interest in the concept of eudaimonic well-being can be interpreted as an explicit acknowledgement of the ethical dimension of well-being and the need to preserve its
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Religiousness, spirituality, and eudaimonic and hedonic well-being

Counselling Psychology Quarterly, 2014
This study tested a conceptual model of religiousness/spirituality (R/S) and hedonic well-being (HWB; measured by life satisfaction and positive affect) by including eudaimonic well-being (EWB; measured by meaning in life) as a mediator. Given the multidimensionality of R/S, we examined whether and how the magnitudes of direct and indirect ...
Eunju Yoon   +6 more
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Eudaimonic well-being and education

2018
This chapter relies on the distinction between hedonic and eudaimonic well-being as proposed in the seminal work by Ryan and Decy and presents the strong historical connection of the latter with education. It looks at the strong connection between eudaimonic well-being and education, suggesting that eudaimonic well-being education must be intended as ...
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Some thoughts on spirituality and eudaimonic well-being

Mental Health, Religion & Culture, 2006
This article describes the relation between spirituality and well-being. First, we differentiate spirituality from religion by focusing on the inner attitude of living life directly related to the sacred that is not restricted to a membership of a religion.
van Dierendonck, Dirk, Mohan, K
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Hedonic and eudaimonic well-being: A psycholinguistic view

Tourism Management, 2018
Abstract Well-being as an intangible, philosophical, and multi-faceted phenomenon is hard to measure. By taking a psycholinguistic expression of well-being, we measure how tourists' experiencing holiday destinations affects their well-being states.
Kamal Rahmani   +2 more
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The Eudaimonic Turn: Well-being in Literary Studies

Journal of Psychology in Africa, 2014
The history of the world is in part the story of competing trends of thinking, of zeitgeist, as Hegel calls them, which come to dominate an age.
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Revisiting the relationship between maximizing and well-being: An investigation of eudaimonic well-being

Personality and Individual Differences, 2016
Abstract Research on the relationship between maximizing (i.e., the general tendency to seek only the best option and not settle for “good enough” options) and subjective well-being has led to conflicting findings. Although earlier studies suggested that maximizing is associated with lower well-being, more recent studies have challenged this ...
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Residential tourism and eudaimonic well-being: A ‘value-adding’ analysis

Annals of Tourism Research, 2021
Fei Hao, Honggen Xiao
exaly  

Conceptual Challenges for a Science of Eudaimonic Well-Being

2016
Philosophers have long struggled to describe and conceptualize the phenomenon of eudaimonic well-being. These struggles only become exacerbated when the project turns to conceptualizing the science of eudaimonic well-being. While it is easy enough to provide boiler-plate descriptions of eudaimonia, such as a state of “well-functioning” or “flourishing”,
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