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Books > Social sciences > Psychology > Philosophy & theory of psychology
This book examines an interdependent approach to happiness and
well-being, one that contrasts starkly with dominant approaches
that have originated from Western culture(s). It highlights the
diversity of potential pathways towards happiness and well-being
globally, and answers calls - voiced in the UN’s Sustainable
Development Goals - for more socially and environmentally
sustainable models. Leading global organizations including the
OECD, UNICEF, and UNESCOÂ are now proposing human happiness
and well-being as a more sustainable alternative to a myopic focus
on GDP growth. Yet, the definition of well-being offered by these
organizations derives largely from the philosophies, social
sciences, and institutional patterns of Europe and the United
States. Across seven chapters this book carefully probes the
inadequacy of these approaches to well-being globally and reveals
the distorting effect this has on how we imagine our world,
organize institutions, and plan our collective future(s). It shares
a wealth of evidence and examples from across East Asia - a region
where interdependence remains foregrounded - and concludes by
provocatively arguing that interdependence may provide a more
sustainable approach to happiness and well-being in the 21st
century. A timely and accessible book, it offers fresh insights for
scholars and policymakers working in the areas of psychology,
health, sociology, education, international development, public
policy, and philosophy. This is an open access book.
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Behold
(Hardcover)
Lauren Sleeman
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R823
Discovery Miles 8 230
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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'In order to use law to improve social welfare, scholars and policy
makers need to be able to predict how people will respond to the
legal change. To do so, they must understand when and how decisions
are affects by systematic biases and heuristics, including how
people respond to changes in either the legal or institutional
environment. In this path-breaking volume, Professors Teitelbaum
and Zeiler have assembled leading scholars from a variety of
disciplines to enrich our understanding of human decision-making
and analyze the implications of behavioral analysis for a wide
range of legal issues, including antitrust, consumer finance,
criminal law, torts, and property. This book will be enormously
valuable for students, scholars and policy makers.' - Jennifer
Arlen, New York University, School of Law, US The field of
behavioral economics has contributed greatly to our understanding
of human decision making by refining neoclassical assumptions and
developing models that account for psychological, cognitive, and
emotional forces. The field?s insights have important implications
for law. This Research Handbook offers a variety of perspectives
from renowned experts on a wide-ranging set of topics including
punishment, finance, tort law, happiness, and the application of
experimental literatures to law. It also includes analyses of
conceptual foundations, cautions, limitations and proposals for
ways forward. The leading scholars of law, economics, and
psychology featured in this Research Handbook use their insights to
synthesize and contribute to the extant research at the
intersection of behavioral economics and key areas of law, and to
demonstrate methods for effective original research. With synthetic
literature reviews and original research, conceptual overviews and
critical perspectives, as well as topic-specific chapters, it
provides a strong overview of this burgeoning field. Law and
economics scholars, behavioral law scholars, and behavioral
economists and psychologists dealing with law, judgement and
decision-making will appreciate this Research Handbook?s dedication
to applicable research, and judges, lawmakers, policy advocates and
regulators will note its important practical implications for law
and public policy. Contributors include: S. Agarwal, A. al-Nowaihi,
B.W. Ambrose, J. Baron, M. Bos, G. Charness, T. Chorvat, G.
DeAngelo, S. Dhami, B. Ho, P.H. Huang, D. Huffman, O.D. Jones, C.M.
Landeo, B. Luppi, K. McCabe, G. Mitchell, F. Parisi, S. Payne
Carter, P.M. Skiba, A. Stein, T. Wilkinson-Ryan, E. Xiao, K. Zeiler
The ubiquitous presence of imaginative work points at its
importance among the higher mental functions. This collective
volume discusses both the social relevance of imagination, that
cannot be reduced to an inter-individual feature, and the
cultural-historical conditions of imagining. The authors develop
different theoretical and empirical works in which imagining,
planning, anticipating, remembering and acting are put in relation
with crucial moments of human existence, as early as birth and even
after death. The proposal of this volume emerged during a "kitchen
seminar" session at the III International Seminar of Cultural
Psychology in Salvador da Bahia (Brazil, 2017). The debate revolved
around the imaginative capability of human beings and the
possibilities to investigate this phenomenon in a new key. The
awareness that an innovative theoretical and empirical contribution
was needed to the understanding of imaginative phenomena in
everyday life led to the proposal of the book From Dream to Action:
Imagination and (Im)Possible Futures. The book aims to talk to
different audiences: psychologists, sociologists, artists, teachers
and healthcare professionals, addressing a variety of life
experiences - such as imagining alternative futures when facing a
terminal illness, an adoption, a transplant waiting list, or the
choice to give up your musical instrument - mobilize multiple
dimensions of human psyche, from the basic emotions to the more
sophisticated higher mental functions. The constant effort is to
understand the psychological and sociocultural dynamics of each
event, and to contribute to the understanding of human imagining in
the area of semiotic-cultural psychology, dialoguing with
contributions from all the human and social sciences.
This book explores how predictive processing, which argues that our
brains are constantly generating and updating hypotheses about our
external conditions, sheds new light on the nature of the mind. It
shows how it is similar to and expands other theoretical approaches
that emphasize the active role of the mind and its dynamic
function. Offering a complete guide to the philosophical and
empirical implications of predictive processing, contributors bring
perspectives from philosophy, neuroscience, and psychology.
Together, they explore the many philosophical applications of
predictive processing and its exciting potential across mental
health, cognitive science, neuroscience, and robotics. Presenting
an extensive and balanced overview of the subject, The Philosophy
and Science of Predictive Processing is a landmark volume within
philosophy of mind.
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