PSYCHOLOGIA
Online ISSN : 1347-5916
Print ISSN : 0033-2852
ISSN-L : 0033-2852
SPECIAL ISSUE: INTERACTIONS WITHIN AND BETWEEN PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCES (II)
Guest Editor: Katsumi Watanabe
A HOLISTIC VIEW OF HAPPINESS: BELIEF IN THE NEGATIVE SIDE OF HAPPINESS IS MORE PREVALENT IN JAPAN THAN IN THE UNITED STATES
Yukiko UCHIDA
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Keywords: happiness, culture, self, holism
JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

2010 Volume 53 Issue 4 Pages 236-245

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Abstract
Two studies tested the hypothesis that while Americans believe that happiness is an enduring positive state to be pursued by each individual, Japanese believe that it is a positive, but transitory interpersonal moment fraught with negative consequences such as others’ envy and a reduced ability to attend to one’s surroundings. Study 1 used a standard questionnaire method to show that people in Japanese cultural contexts have a more holistic concept of happiness than do people in European-American cultural contexts. Study 2 showed that this Japanese holistic view of happiness is associated with a holistic worldview rather than personal subjective well-being. This suggests that the holistic view of happiness is related to a dialectic thinking style prevalent in Japanese culture and unrelated to individual levels of subjective well-being.
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© 2010 by the PSYCHOLOGIA SOCIETY
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