Virtue in Positive Psychology

Authors

  • Liz Gulliford University of Northampton, Department of Psychology

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.19272/202000701006

Keywords:

Virtue, Character Strengths, Positive Psychology, Don Browning, Terry Cooper, Martin Seligman

Abstract

The methodological approach used by Browning and Cooper in Religious Thought and the Modern Psychologies (2004) is applied to positive psychology, with special reference to Martin Seligman, and is found to have affinities with both humanistic psychology and the cognitive therapies. The humanistic concept of self-actualisation resonates with Seligman’s understanding of signature strengths, while there are echoes of the Stoic self of the cognitive therapies in positive psychology. Both fields have left their different marks on the way character strengths and virtues have been understood in positive psychology. For one thing, understanding human excellences primarily as individual capacities occludes the fact that many virtues are profoundly relational ; they are conceived, practised and sustained in relation to other agents and exercised in the service of our common human life. For another, there is much more to forgiveness, gratitude and hope than a means of effecting emotional repair.

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Published

01-03-2020

How to Cite

Gulliford, Liz. “Virtue in Positive Psychology”. Acta Philosophica 29, no. 1 (March 1, 2020): 91–112. Accessed December 5, 2024. https://www.actaphilosophica.it/article/view/3651.

Issue

Section

Monographic section