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DOI: 10.1080/17439760902844285
OpenAccess: Closed
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Wellness as healthy functioning or wellness as happiness: the importance of eudaimonic thinking (response to the Kashdan et al. and Waterman discussion)

Richard M. Ryan,Veronika Huta

Happiness
Positive psychology
Eudaimonia
2009
Kashdan, Biswas-Diener and King (2008 Sen, A. 1999. Development as freedom, New York: Knopf. [Google Scholar]) debated with Waterman (2008 Waterman, AS. 2008. Reconsidering happiness: A eudaimonist's perspective. Journal of Positive Psychology, 3: 234–252. [Taylor & Francis Online] , [Google Scholar]) the value of eudaimonic perspectives in well-being research. In this invited response we discuss problems associated with reducing the conceptualization of well-being to subjective well-being (SWB). Although we like and use SWB ourselves as an indicator of well-being, the value of eudaimonic thinking, both in the generation of hypotheses concerning how goals and lifestyles link with wellness, and in broadening and differentiating the outcomes considered to be reflective of wellness. We agree that eudaimonic research in psychology is young and varied, but suggest that preemptively constraining the field to a “big one” (SWB) conceptualization of wellness would be less generative.
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    Wellness as healthy functioning or wellness as happiness: the importance of eudaimonic thinking (response to the Kashdan et al. and Waterman discussion)” is a paper by Richard M. Ryan Veronika Huta published in 2009. It has an Open Access status of “closed”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.