The
accompanying graphic suggests that it does. It is from Michael A Bishop’s book,
The Good Life: Unifying the Philosophy and
Psychology of Well-Being, published in 2015.
What is a
PCN? A PCN is a positive causal network, or feedback loop. The general idea
behind PCNs is that a person has a high level of well-being when they are
experiencing a self-perpetuating cycle of positive emotions, positive
attitudes, positive traits, and successful engagement with the world.
Bishop wrote the book to provide positive psychology with a solid foundation based on “a bit of fairly conventional philosophy of science”. He argues that the philosophical literature on well-being (hedonism, informed desire theory, and Aristotelianism) is too fragmented to provide positive psychology with a solid foundation.
The author
observes that positive psychology offers practical, science-based advice about
well-being. The explosion of scientific research on well-being has revealed homeostatically
clustered sets of feelings, emotions, attitudes and behaviors. That provides the
basis for positive psychology to be viewed as the study of the structure and
dynamics of PCNs.
Bishop demonstrates
that much research in positive psychology can be viewed in that light.
Consistency
with my view of well-being
In my view,
it makes sense to view psychological well-being as being at the opposite end of
the spectrum to mental illness. Felicia Hupert and Timothy So viewed it as being on the opposite end of the spectrum to anxiety and depression. Those authors identified ten symptoms of well-being: competence,
emotional stability, engagement, meaning, optimism, positive emotion, positive
relationships, resilience, self-esteem, and vitality. They examined
relationships among those symptoms in a study using data from a representative
sample of 43, 000 Europeans. (‘Flourishing Across Europe’, Soc. Ind. Res. 2013.)
The view of
psychological well-being adopted by Hupert and So seems to me to be easier to
understand than Michale Bishop’s view that it consists of PCNs. Nevertheless,
the two views don’t conflict. At one point Bishop actually suggests that it is
possible to understand PCNs by contrasting them with negative or vicious causal
cycles involving negative thoughts, feelings, attitudes, behaviors and
dysfunctions.
Do PCNs
constitute “The Good Life”?
As a
neo-Aristotelian, the main objection I have to Bishop’s book is its title.
I am not particularly
concerned that Bishop’s approach might be at variance with that of psychologists
who claim to have an Aristotelian approach to positive psychology. Those people
are well-intentioned but the indicators they use seem to be somewhat removed
from what Aristotle had in mind when he expressed the view that human
flourishing is a virtuous activity of the soul.
I guess that
Aristotle would see a strong positive link between virtue and PCNs. After all,
he saw virtue as being about not just about doing the right thing but also taking
pleasure in it. Of course, Aristotle also acknowledged that people could obtain
pleasure (but not eudaimonia) without being virtuous.
That raises
the question of whether it is possible for a villain to have a high level of
psychological well-being. In my book, Freedom, Progress, and Human Flourishing I expressed a view implying that villains can’t
have high level of psychological well-being:
“It may be possible for a villain to score highly on positive emotion and self-esteem, but I doubt that a villain could obtain a high overall score in a competently administered psychological assessment.”
I based
that view on research findings relating to the dark triad.
Bishop
presents a different view:
“In a culture in which cruelty is rewarded, a person naturally disposed to cruelty can have success and a high degree of well-being. This is not a consequence to jump for joy about. It’s just a sobering fact about our world that bad people can have well-being.”
Bad people
can certainly have the outward signs of success in a culture in which cruelty
is rewarded but I suspect that, even in that cultural context, people who take
a stand against cruelty may tend to have stronger PCNs. (I could be wrong about
that. It is an empirical question.)
In their
book, Modernizing Aristotle’s Ethics, Roger Bissell and Vinay
Kolhatkar suggest that humaneness is constitutive of a psychic
state humans desire and cite evidence opposed to the widespread belief that
ruthless people tend to get ahead in life, love, and especially business. (For references, please see my essay
entitled ‘Is it possible for humans to
flourish if they don’t live good lives?’,
recently published on The Savvy Street).
Irrespective
of whether bad people can have high PCNs, no Aristotelian could accept that
they are flourishing. The view that bad people can live “good” lives is also
opposed to the folk view of what it means to live a good life. (Please see the
essay cited above for references and discussion.)
Conclusions
In his
book, The Good Life, Michael Bishop argues that positive psychology
should be viewed as the study of the structure and dynamics of positive causal
networks (PCNs). PCNs are self-perpetuating cycles of positive emotions,
positive attitudes, positive traits, and successful engagement with the world.
The view
that psychological well-being is deeply rooted in strong PCNs seems to be
consistent with the view that it lies on the opposite end of the spectrum to anxiety
and depression.
The title
of Bishop’s book is at variance with his view that it is possible for bad
people to have strong PCNs. I am not convinced that it is possible for bad
people to have high PCNs. Irrespective of whether that is so, however, people
of bad character certainly do not live “the good life”.
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