Happiness: A HistoryToday, human beings tend to think of happiness as a natural right. But they haven't always felt this way. For the ancient Greeks, happiness meant virtue. For the Romans, it implied prosperity and divine favor. For Christians, happiness was synonymous with God. Throughout history, happiness has been equated regularly with the highest human calling, the most perfect human state. Yet it's only within the past two hundred years that human beings have begun to think of happiness as not just an earthly possibility but also as an earthly entitlement, even an obligation. In this sweeping new book, historian Darrin M. McMahon argues that our modern belief in happiness is the product of a dramatic revolution in human expectations carried out since the eighteenth century. In the tradition of works by Peter Gay and Simon Schama, Happiness draws on a multitude of sources, including art and architecture, poetry and scripture, music and theology, and literature and myth, to offer a sweeping intellectual history of man's most elusive yet coveted goal. |
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LibraryThing Review
Crítica de los usuarios - vlorand - LibraryThingwas slow going at first, but began to become quite interesting for me as it reached the last two centuries. Leer comentario completo
Contenido
THE TRAGEDY OF HAPPINESS I | 1 |
THE HIGHEST GOOD | 19 |
PERPETUAL FELICITY | 66 |
FROM HEAVEN TO EARTH | 140 |
SELFEVIDENT TRUTHS | 197 |
A MODERN RITE | 253 |
QUESTIONING THE EVIDENCE | 271 |
LIBERALISM AND ITS DISCONTENTS | 312 |
BUILDING HAPPY WORLDS | 363 |
JOYFUL SCIENCE | 406 |
HAPPY ENDING | 454 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS | 481 |
529 | |
Términos y frases comunes
America animals Aristotle Augustine become believed body called century Christian cited claim classical clear complete continued cultural death desire direct divine early earth earthly Enlightenment Essay existence experience fact faith feeling felicity final follow force fortune Freud give gods greatest Greek happiness heaven hope human Ibid individual John later leading less live Locke look means mind moral nature never Nietzsche observed original pain perfect philosopher pleasure political possible present promise pursuit pursuit of happiness question reason regarded religion Roman Rousseau Saint Saint-Simon seems sense serve social society Socrates soul spirit suffering suggests things thought tion tradition trans true truth turn understanding unhappy University Press virtue whole women writings York