1st Edition

Feeling Good An Evolutionary Perspective on Life Choices

By Menelaos Apostolou Copyright 2016
    228 Pages
    by Routledge

    228 Pages
    by Routledge

    Every day, people make life choices that, ideally, increase their evolutionary fitness – the chances of survival and successful reproduction – and lead to positive feelings of fulfilment, accomplishment, and happiness. Sometimes, however, individuals experience quite the opposite: feelings of sadness caused by fitness-decreasing choices. Fortunately, many advancements in evolutionary theory and evolutionary psychology have increased humans' capacity as a species to address the question of how to live a life characterized by more positive than negative feelings.

    Feeling Good reveals anyone can learn how to trigger mechanisms that generate positive feelings and increase positive fitness levels. The key is to employ an evolutionary perspective on how mental mechanisms generate feelings in relation to our life choices.

    From an insightfully evolutionary perspective, Feeling Good examines how to find and keep a mate, make good career decisions, build a solid social network, deal with death and negative influences, and make life choices in general that can lead to better and more sustainable mental and physical health. Menelaos Apostolou deepens our understanding of human nature by exploring what is good and evil in an evolutionary sense as well as in relation to religious dogmas; and whether making fitness-increasing life choices can lead to more good or more evil acts.

    Contents Preface Acknowledgments 1 The Evolved Nature of Positive andNegative Feelings 2 Following the Fitness-Increasing Direction:Considerations and Challenges 3 Human Polymorphism or Why We AreNot All the Same 4 Discovering and Accepting Who You Are andWho Others Are 5 What Makes a Fitness-Increasing Mate? 6 The Challenges of Mating 7 Creating a Fitness-Increasing Marriage 8 The Challenges of Parenting 9 Career and Money in the Evolutionary Perspective 10 Relatives, Friends, Acquaintances, and theBuilding of a Social Network 11 Evolutionary Insights for Better Mental Health 12 Evolutionary Insights for Better Physical Health 13 Good, Evil, and the Evolutionary Perspective 14 Some Further Considerations Conclusion Index

    Biography

    Menelaos Apostolou