TARGET ARTICLE: Does the Positive Psychology Movement Have Legs?

American psychology seems suddenly to be enmeshed in a new ideological movement that is being referred to as positive psychology. Its premise is that if individuals engage in positive thinking and feeling and abandon or minimize their preoccupation with the harsh and tragic-that is, the stressful side of lifethey will have found a magic elixir of health and well-being. It is an old idea that has usually been popular, though we still are uncertain about the conditions under which an emotion could have major effects if any. My generation enjoyed the Hoagy Carmichael song which states "You have to accentuate the positive, eliminate the negative, latch onto the affirmative, and don't mess with Mr. In-between." This is, I believe, a good general translation, not literal of course, of the main implication of the positive psychology outlook, at least as it is understood by many psychologists. I would be critical, too, if anyone was urging accentuating what is referred to as negative psychology, which would be equally unsatisfactory. As of now, the movement is, in my view, in danger of being just another one of the many fads that come and go in our field, which usually disappear in time, sometimes to return again in another form because the issues addressed are important but unresolved (Roskies & Lazarus, 1988). After a time, we will once again veer toward some other set of issues that are regarded as God's gift to advanced psychological understanding, but it too will ultimately disappear. My business here is not to speculate about why our field is like this; it just is.

[1]  R. BRIGHTMAN,et al.  On Human Bondage , 1966, Nature.

[2]  Kennon M. Sheldon,et al.  Why positive psychology is necessary. , 2001, The American psychologist.

[3]  C. R. Snyder,et al.  Handbook of positive psychology , 2002 .

[4]  M. Bradley,et al.  Motivated attention: Affect, activation, and action. , 1997 .

[5]  How probable is the null hypothesis? , 2002, The American psychologist.

[6]  J. Taylor,et al.  A personality scale of manifest anxiety. , 1953, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[7]  R. Lazarus The stress and coping paradim , 1981 .

[8]  D. Cicchetti Emotion and Adaptation , 1993 .

[9]  F. Schmidt,et al.  Are there benefits from NHST? , 2002, The American psychologist.

[10]  S. Armeli,et al.  A daily process approach to coping. Linking theory, research, and practice. , 2000, The American psychologist.

[11]  Richard S. Lazarus,et al.  Fifty Years of the Research and theory of R.s. Lazarus: An Analysis of Historical and Perennial Issues , 1997 .

[12]  S. Schimmel The seven deadly sins : Jewish, Christian, and classical reflections on human nature , 1992 .

[13]  S. Jenkins,et al.  The Dynamics of Child Poverty in Industrialised Countries: Conceptual and measurement issues , 2001 .

[14]  S. Folkman,et al.  Age differences in stress and coping processes. , 1987, Psychology and aging.

[15]  K. Scherer,et al.  Appraisal processes in emotion: Theory, methods, research. , 2001 .

[16]  W. Mischel,et al.  A conditional approach to dispositional constructs: the local predictability of social behavior. , 1987, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[17]  S. Epstein A research paradigm for the study of personality and emotions. , 1983, Nebraska Symposium on Motivation. Nebraska Symposium on Motivation.

[18]  S. Segerstrom Optimism, Goal Conflict, and Stressor-Related Immune Change , 2001, Journal of Behavioral Medicine.

[19]  E. Diener,et al.  Subjective well-being. , 1984, Psychological bulletin.

[20]  B. Fredrickson The role of positive emotions in positive psychology. The broaden-and-build theory of positive emotions. , 2001, The American psychologist.

[21]  Why chance is a good theory. , 2002, The American psychologist.

[22]  G. VandenBos Outcome assessment of psychotherapy. , 1996, The American psychologist.

[23]  B. Gottlieb Conceptual and Measurement Issues in the Study of Coping with Chronic Stress , 1997 .

[24]  Stevan E. Hobfoll,et al.  Stress, Culture, and Community: The Psychology and Philosophy of Stress , 1998 .

[25]  C Peterson,et al.  The future of optimism. , 2000, The American psychologist.

[26]  H. Selye,et al.  [Stress without distress]. , 1976, Bruxelles medical.

[27]  D. Watson Mood and temperament , 2000 .

[28]  R. Lazarus Vexing Research Problems Inherent in Cognitive-Mediational Theories of Emotion-and Some Solutions , 1995 .

[29]  Beyond objectivity and subjectivity. , 2002, The American psychologist.

[30]  S. Schneider In search of realistic optimism. Meaning, knowledge, and warm fuzziness. , 2001, The American psychologist.

[31]  D. M. Brovernam Normative and ipsative measurement in psychology. , 1962, Psychological review.

[32]  S. Folkman,et al.  The relationship between coping and emotion: implications for theory and research. , 1988, Social science & medicine.

[33]  J. Moskowitz,et al.  Positive affect and the other side of coping. , 2000, The American psychologist.

[34]  M. Csíkszentmihályi,et al.  Positive psychology. An introduction. , 2000, The American psychologist.

[35]  K. Schaie The course of adult intellectual development. , 1994, The American psychologist.

[36]  R. Lazarus stress and coping paradigm , 1980 .

[37]  Donelson R. Forsyth,et al.  Handbook of social and clinical psychology : the health perspective , 1991 .

[38]  A. Bandura Self-Efficacy: The Exercise of Control , 1997, Journal of Cognitive Psychotherapy.

[39]  Brovernam Dm,et al.  Normative and ipsative measurement in psychology. , 1962 .

[40]  Richard S. Lazanis Stress and emotion, a new synthesis , 1999 .

[41]  S. Folkman,et al.  The impact of daily stress on health and mood: psychological and social resources as mediators. , 1988, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[42]  S. M. Finch,et al.  Stress, Coping, and Development in Children , 1984 .

[43]  M. Somerfield,et al.  Stress and coping research. Methodological challenges, theoretical advances, and clinical applications. , 2000, The American psychologist.

[44]  L. Carstensen,et al.  Emotion and aging: experience, expression, and control. , 1997, Psychology and aging.

[45]  R. Baumeister,et al.  Breaking Hearts: The Two Sides of Unrequited Love , 1992 .

[46]  S. Folkman,et al.  Coping as a mediator of emotion. , 1988, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[47]  S. Hobfoll The Influence of Culture, Community, and the Nested-Self in the Stress Process: Advancing Conservation of Resources Theory , 2001 .

[48]  R. Lazarus Relational meaning and discrete emotions. , 2001 .

[49]  M. McCullough,et al.  Is gratitude a moral affect? , 2001, Psychological bulletin.

[50]  D. Spiegel Understanding Risk Assessment by Cancer Patients , 1997, Journal of health psychology.

[51]  J. Krueger,et al.  Null hypothesis significance testing. On the survival of a flawed method. , 2001, The American psychologist.

[52]  J. Russell Culture and the categorization of emotions. , 1991, Psychological bulletin.

[53]  J. Kiecolt-Glaser,et al.  Psychoneuroimmunology and Psychosomatic Medicine: Back to the Future , 2002, Psychosomatic medicine.

[54]  Michael Lewis,et al.  Issues in the Study of Personality Development , 2001 .

[55]  R. Lazarus Conservation of Resources theory (COR): Little more than words masquerading as a new theory. , 2001 .

[56]  A. Masten Ordinary magic. Resilience processes in development. , 2001, The American psychologist.

[57]  S. Lyubomirsky,et al.  Why are some people happier than others? The role of cognitive and motivational processes in well-being. , 2001, The American psychologist.

[58]  R. Lazarus,et al.  Toward better research on stress and coping. , 2000, The American psychologist.

[59]  Raymond F. Paloutzian,et al.  Religious Conversion and Personality Change , 1999 .

[60]  A. Caspi,et al.  Personality Development Across the Life Course:The Argument for Change and Continuity , 2001 .

[61]  B. Fredrickson,et al.  Positive Emotions Speed Recovery from the Cardiovascular Sequelae of Negative Emotions. , 1998, Cognition & emotion.

[62]  Richard S. Lazarus,et al.  EMOTIONS: A COGNITIVE–PHENOMENOLOGICAL ANALYSIS , 1980 .

[63]  S. Folkman,et al.  Stress, appraisal, and coping , 1974 .

[64]  R. E. Wheeler,et al.  Psychometric properties of resting anterior EEG asymmetry: temporal stability and internal consistency. , 1992, Psychophysiology.