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Happiness Across Cultures - Views of Happiness and Quality of Life in Non-Western Cultures (Paperback, 2012 ed.)
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Happiness Across Cultures - Views of Happiness and Quality of Life in Non-Western Cultures (Paperback, 2012 ed.)
Series: Science Across Cultures: The History of Non-Western Science, 6
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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There seems to have been a view that different cultures experience
happiness differently. The West is considered materialistic, and
happiness comes from achievement and acquisition. The East is said
to be more people-oriented, where happiness is a result of deep
personal interactions. Thus, poor people can be happier in the East
than the West, because they are not so concerned with possession
and more with society. It is certainly true that people experience
happiness differently. Some people are resilient, and can put
difficult times behind them easily; others cling to sorrow and hard
times. Some are philosophically inclined to accept their situation
the glass is half full not half empty. Whether this is a matter of
culture or personality is hard to gauge; most likely it is a
combination of both. This book will explore notions of happiness in
different non-Western cultures. Some of the essays will do some
comparison with the East, but I have tried to keep the essays
culture-specific when possible. There are also some cross-cultural
essays and some philosophical and scientific studies that are not
related to one culture only. There are some obvious problems. Most
obvious is the fact that no political state has one culture. In a
country the size of China, almost any explanation of one group
might not apply to another. I have tried to include a few chapters
on China to correct for this. This is even the case in a country as
small as Bhutan; there is a mixture of Buddhist and Hindu people in
the country, and there ideas of what makes one happy could be quite
different. In South America, there is more likely a connection
between mountain dwellers in different nations and rainforest
dwellers than with, say, all Peruvians."
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