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Happiness Syllabus Alexandrova, Anna (2005), ‘Subjective WellBeing and Kahneman's Objective Happiness’, Journal of Happiness Studies, 6:3, pp. 301324 (Standard Pages: 22) Annas, Julia (2004), ‘Happiness as Achievement’, Daedalus, 133:2, pp. 4451 (Standard Pages: 10) Barrotta, Pierluigi (2008), ‘Why Economists Should be Unhappy with the Economics of Happiness’, Economics and Philosophy, 24:2, pp. 145165 (Standard Pages: 25) Baumeister, Roy F., Kathleen D. Vohs, Jennifer L. Aaker and Emily Garbinsky (2013), ‘Some key differences between a happy life and a meaningful life’, Journal of Positive Psychology, 8:6, pp. 505516 (Standard Pages: 28) BiswasDiener, Robert, Todd B. Kashdan and Laura A. King (2009), ‘Two traditions of happiness research, not two distinct types of happiness’, The Journal of Positive Psychology, 4:3, pp. 208211 (Standard Pages: 7) Camerer, Colin, Samuel Issacharoff, George Loewenstein, Ted O’Donoghue and Matthew Rabin (2003), ‘Regulation for Conservatives: Behavioral Economics and the Case for Asymmetric Paternalism’, University of Pennsylvania Law Review, 151:3, pp. 12111254 (Standard Pages: 64) Comim, Flavio (2005), ‘Capabilities and Happiness: Potential Synergies’, Review of Social Economy, 63:2, pp. 161176 (Standard Pages: 17) Deci, Edward L. and Richard M. Ryan (2008), ‘Hedonia, Eudaimonia, and WellBeing: An Introduction’, Journal of Happiness Studies, 9:1, pp. 111 (Standard Pages: 8) De Prycker, Valérie (2010), ‘Happiness on the Political Agenda: PROS and CONS’, Journal of Happiness Studies, pp. 585603 (Standard Pages: 28) Diener, Edward (1994), ‘Assessing Subjective WellBeing: Progress and Opportunities’, Social Indicators Research, 31:2, pp. 103157 (Standard Pages: 51)

Happiness Syllabus

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Syllabus of philosophic texts concerning happiness

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  • Happiness Syllabus Alexandrova, Anna (2005), Subjective Well-Being and Kahneman's Objective Happiness, Journal of Happiness Studies, 6:3, pp. 301-324 (Standard Pages: 22) Annas, Julia (2004), Happiness as Achievement, Daedalus, 133:2, pp. 44-51 (Standard Pages: 10) Barrotta, Pierluigi (2008), Why Economists Should be Unhappy with the Economics of Happiness, Economics and Philosophy, 24:2, pp. 145-165 (Standard Pages: 25) Baumeister, Roy F., Kathleen D. Vohs, Jennifer L. Aaker and Emily Garbinsky (2013), Some key differences between a happy life and a meaningful life, Journal of Positive Psychology, 8:6, pp. 505-516 (Standard Pages: 28) Biswas-Diener, Robert, Todd B. Kashdan and Laura A. King (2009), Two traditions of happiness research, not two distinct types of happiness, The Journal of Positive Psychology, 4:3, pp. 208-211 (Standard Pages: 7) Camerer, Colin, Samuel Issacharoff, George Loewenstein, Ted ODonoghue and Matthew Rabin (2003), Regulation for Conservatives: Behavioral Economics and the Case for Asymmetric Paternalism, University of Pennsylvania Law Review, 151:3, pp. 1211-1254 (Standard Pages: 64) Comim, Flavio (2005), Capabilities and Happiness: Potential Synergies, Review of Social Economy, 63:2, pp. 161-176 (Standard Pages: 17) Deci, Edward L. and Richard M. Ryan (2008), Hedonia, Eudaimonia, and Well-Being: An Introduction, Journal of Happiness Studies, 9:1, pp. 1-11 (Standard Pages: 8) De Prycker, Valrie (2010), Happiness on the Political Agenda: PROS and CONS, Journal of Happiness Studies, pp. 585-603 (Standard Pages: 28) Diener, Edward (1994), Assessing Subjective Well-Being: Progress and Opportunities, Social Indicators Research, 31:2, pp. 103-157 (Standard Pages: 51)

  • Diener, Edward, Eunkook M. Suh, Richard E. Lucas and Heidi L. Smith (1999), Subjective Well- Being: Three Decades of Progress, Psychological Bulletin, 125:2, pp. 276-302 (Standard Pages: 75) Di Tella, Rafael and Robert MacCulloch (2006), Some Uses of Happiness Data in Economics, Journal of Economic Perspectives, 20:1, pp. 25-46 (Standard Pages: 37) Duncan, Grant (2010), Should Happiness-Maximization be the Goal of Governments? Journal of Happiness Studies, 11:2, 163-178 (Standard Pages: 24) Dworkin, Gerald (1972) Paternalism, The Monist, 56:1, pp. 64-84 (Standard Pages: 20) Easterlin, Richard (1974), Does Economic Growth Improve the Human Lot? Some Empirical Evidence, in Paul David and Melvin Reder (1974), Nations and Households in Economic Growth: Essays in Honor of Moses Abramovitz, New York, Academic Press, pp. 89-125 (Standard Pages: 41) Feldman, Fred (2010), Chapter 6 What is This Thing Called Happiness?, What Is This Thing Called Happiness?, New York, Oxford University Press, pp. 107-136 (Standard Pages: 38) Frey, Bruno and Alois Stutzer (2002), Economics and Happiness: How the Economy and Institutions Affect Human Well-Being, Princeton, Princeton University Press, chapter 1 (Standard Pages: 11) Gilbert, Daniel T. and Timothy D. Wilson (2000), Miswanting: Some Problems in the Forecasting of Future Affective States, in Joseph P. Forgas, Thinking and Feeling: The Role of Affect in Social Cognition, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, pp. 178-197 (Standard Pages: 22) Graeber, David (2011), Debt: The First 5,000 Years (Standard Pages: 455) Hausman, Daniel (2010), Hedonism and Welfare Economics, Economics and Philosophy, 26:3, pp. 321-344 (Standard Pages: 28) Haybron, Daniel (2001), Happiness and Pleasure, Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, 62:3, pp. 501-528

  • (Standard Pages: 34) Haybron, Daniel (2008), Happiness, the Self and Human Flourishing, Utilitas, 20:1, pp. 21-49 (Standard Pages: 33) Huang, Peter H. (2008), Authentic Happiness, Self-Knowledge and Legal Policy, Minnesota Journal of Law, Science and Technology, 9:2, pp. 755-802 (Standard Pages: 44) Kahneman, Daniel (1999), Chapter 1 Objective Happiness in Daniel Kahneman, Ed Diener and Norbert Schwarz, Foundations of Hedonic Psychology, New York, Russell Sage, pp. 3-25 (Standard Pages: 45) Kahneman, Daniel and Alan B. Krueger (2006), Developments in the Measurement of Subjective Well-Being, Journal of Economic Perspectives, 20:1, pp. 3-24 (Standard Pages: 23) Kahneman, Daniel, Alan B. Krueger, David Schkade, Norbert Schwarz and Arthur Stone (2004), Toward National Well-Being Accounts, The American Economic Review, 94:2, pp. 429-434 (Standard Pages: 9) Kahneman, Daniel, Peter Wakker and Rakesh Sarin (1997), Back to Bentham? Explorations of Experienced Utility, The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 112:2, 1997, pp. 375-405 (Standard Pages: 32) Kashdan, Todd B., Robert Biswas-Diener and Laura A. King (2008), Reconsidering Happiness: The Costs of Distinguishing Between Hedonics and Eudaimonia, The Journal of Positive Psychology, 3:4, pp. 219-233 (Standard Pages: 26) Kesebir, Pelin and Ed Diener, In Pursuit of Happiness: Empirical Answers to Philosophical Questions, Perspectives on Psychological Science, 3:2, pp. 117-125 (Standard Pages: 26) Keyes, Corey L.M., and Julia Annas (2009), Feeling good and functioning well: distinctive concepts in ancient philosophy and contemporary science, The Journal of Positive Psychology, 4:3, pp. 197-201 (Standard Pages: 8) Kraut, Richard (1979), Two Conceptions of Happiness, Philosophical Review, 88:2, pp. 167-197 (Standard Pages: 32)

  • Kreider, Evan (2010), Mill on Happiness, Philosophical Papers, 39:1, pp. 53-68 (Standard Pages: 16) Loewenstein, George and Peter A. Ubel (2008), Hedonic adaptation and the role of decision and experience utility in public policy, Journal of Public Economics, 92:8-9, 1795-1810 (Standard Pages: 33) Martin, Rex (1972), A Defence of Mills Qualitative Hedonism, Philosophy, 47:180, pp. 140-151 (Standard Pages: 13) Marx, Karl (1844), Economic & Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844 (Standard Pages: 140) Mill, John Stuart (1859), On Liberty (Standard Pages: 116) Nussbaum, Martha C. (2011), Creating Capabilities: The Human Development Approach, Cambridge: Harvard University Press, chapter 7 (Standard Pages: 18) Nussbaum, Martha (2005), Mill between Aristotle and Bentham in Luigino Bruni and Pier Luigi Porta, Economics and Happiness: Framing The Analysis, New York: Oxford University Press pp. 170-183 (Standard Pages: 17) Oishi, Shigehiro, Selin Kesebir and Ed Diener (2011), Income Inequality and Happiness, Psychological Science, 22:9, pp. 1095-1100 (Standard Pages: 13) Park, Nansook, Christopher Peterson and Martin E.P. Seligman (2004), Strengths of Character and Well-Being, Journal of Clinical Psychology, 23:5, pp. 603-619 (Standard Pages: 20) Pavot, William (2008), The Assessment of Subjective Well-Being: Successes and Shortfalls, in Michael Eid and Randy J. Larsen (2008), The Science of Subjective Well-Being, New York and London, The Guilford Press, pp. 124-140 (Standard Pages: 23) Ryan, Richard, and Edward Deci (2001), On happiness and human potentials: A review of research on hedonic and eudaimonic well-being, Annual review of psychology, 52:1, 2001, pp. 141-166 (Standard Pages: 30)

  • Ryan, Richard M., Veronika Huta and Edward L. Deci (2008), Living Well: A Self-Determination Perspective on Eudaimonia, Journal of Happiness Studies, 9:1, pp. 139-170 (Standard Pages: 27) Sen, Amartya (2008), The Economics of Happiness and Capabilities, in Lugino Bruni, Flavio Comim and Maurizio Pugno (2008), Capabilities and Happiness, New York, Oxford University Press, pp. 16-27 (Standard Pages: 15) Stevenson, Betsey and Justin Wolfers (2008), Economic Growth and Subjective Well-Being: Reassessing the Easterlin Paradox, Brooking Papers on Economic Activity, Cambridge MA, National Bureau of Economic Research (Standard Pages: 43) Sumner, L.W. (1996), Welfare, Happiness and Ethics, New York, Oxford University Press, chapter 7 (Standard Pages: 36) Tnnsj, Torbjorn (2007), Narrow Hedonism, Journal of Happiness Studies, 8:1, pp. 79-98 (Standard Pages: 18) Veenhoven Ruut (2004), Happiness as an Aim in Public Policy: The Greatest Happiness Principle, in Alex Linley and Stephen Joseph, Positive Psychology in Practice, Hoboken: John Wiley & Sons, pp. 658-678 (Standard Pages: 45) Veenhoven, Ruut (2002), Why Social Policy Needs Subjective Indicators, Social Indicators Research, 58:1/3, pp. 33-45 (Standard Pages: 11) Waterman, Alan S. (2008), Reconsidering Happiness: A Eudaimonists Perspective, The Journal of Positive Psychology, 3:4, pp. 37-41 (Standard Pages: 41) Waterman, Alan S. (1993), Two Conceptions of Happiness: Contrasts of Personal Expressiveness (Eudaimonia) and Hedonic Enjoyment, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 64:4, pp. 678-691 (Standard Pages: 37) Total Pages: 2035