Darwinian hedonism and the epidemic of unhealthy behavior:

"Psychological hedonism - the idea that people tend to act in ways that maximize pleasure and minimize displeasure - has a decidedly poor reputation among academics who study human behavior. Opinions range from outright rejection to those who believe it to be intuitively obvious, but untestable...

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1. Verfasser: Williams, David M. 1976- (VerfasserIn)
Format: Elektronisch E-Book
Sprache:English
Veröffentlicht: Cambridge, United Kingdom Cambridge University Press 2019
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Zusammenfassung:"Psychological hedonism - the idea that people tend to act in ways that maximize pleasure and minimize displeasure - has a decidedly poor reputation among academics who study human behavior. Opinions range from outright rejection to those who believe it to be intuitively obvious, but untestable and therefore unhelpful. In this book, the author introduces an empirically testable and useful theory of psychological hedonism based on contemporary theory and research in the emerging field of affective neuroscience. He goes on to argue that people are genetically endowed with a tendency towards psychological hedonism as a function of Darwinian processes. This view of psychological hedonism in light of its Darwinian origins - thereinafter referred to as Darwinian hedonism - is essential to address the growing global epidemic of unhealthy behavior, such as poor diet, physical inactivity, and substance use"--
"As a psychologist working in a school of public health, a big part of my job is to try to understand human behavior that is related to health, or, health behavior. My focus over the past 10 years or so has been on trying to understand why people engage in, or fail to engage in, regular physical exercise. More specifically, I have spent a lot of time measuring how people feel--good versus bad--when they exercise. My big "discovery", as my loving partner disparagingly refers to it, is that people who feel good during exercise are more likely to exercise in the future, and vice versa"--
Beschreibung:1 Online Ressource
ISBN:9781316275047
DOI:10.1017/9781316275047

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