蜜桃传媒破解版下载

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When the homework is happiness

When the homework is happiness

June Gruber鈥檚 Science of Happiness course doesn鈥檛 map the way to unmitigated joy; on the contrary, the science of emotional wellness is more nuanced, and her students are sharing this message outside the classroom


The Declaration of Independence famously extols the 鈥減ursuit of happiness.鈥 But what, exactly, is happiness, and how should one pursue it? Also, should we even view it as something to be pursued?

Those questions underlie countless , TV documentaries and self-help courses. More rigorously, they鈥檙e the focus of a popular Science of Happiness course taught by June Gruber, a professor of psychology at the University of Colorado Boulder.

Gruber鈥檚 course does not unfold a map to unmitigated delight. Rather, Gruber鈥檚 course pores over the developing research鈥攕ome of it Gruber鈥檚 own鈥攖hat reveals a more nuanced view and even a 鈥渄ark side to happiness.鈥澨齌he course also asks students to summarize and share the science of happiness for 鈥渙utreach鈥 to general audiences.

Spring 2025 Science of Happiness class members with June Gruber

June Gruber (front row left, checked blazer) and her Science of Happiness students pause for a class photo on the last day of the semester. (Photo: June Gruber)

As Gruber has shown in her peer-reviewed research, a TEDx talk and this 蜜桃传媒破解版下载 course, it is not that happiness is bad. Rather, evidence suggests that happiness is one of several human emotions to which people should be open, and excesses of apparent happiness can signal problems such as mania (or bipolar disorder), excessive spending, problem gambling or high-risk sexual encounters.

Perhaps counterintuitively, Gruber cites听a growing body of . They report being less able to be emotionally present in moments that could be happy, and听. That鈥檚 one 鈥渄ark side鈥 of happiness.

New evidence for old advice

As it happens, modern science reflects ancient wisdom. In the final class of her spring 2025 semester, Gruber showed her class a quotation from the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., who said, 鈥淭hose who are not looking for happiness are the most likely to find it, because those who are searching forget that the surest way to be happy is to seek happiness for others.鈥

The English philosopher John Stuart Mill, whom Gruber quotes, said, 鈥淭hose only are happy who have their minds fixed on some object other than their own happiness: on the happiness of others, on the improvement of mankind, even on some art or pursuit, followed not as a means, but as itself an ideal end. Aiming thus at something else, they find happiness by the way.鈥

And that 鈥減ursuit of happiness鈥 phrase from the Declaration of Independence was lifted from the philosopher John Locke, who said the 鈥渉ighest perfection of intellectual nature lies in a careful and constant听pursuit of true and solid happiness; so the care of ourselves, that we mistake not imaginary for real happiness, is the necessary foundation of our liberty.鈥

Locke himself was influenced by Aristotle and Epicurus, who viewed happiness as a laudable goal but who defined happiness as leading a purposeful and contemplative life. Happiness, Aristotle said, 鈥渋s the meaning and the purpose of life, the whole aim and end of human existence.鈥

Gruber discusses this older concept of happiness, sometimes called eudaimonic wellbeing, vs. hedonic wellbeing. Unlike purposeful and meaningful experiences, hedonic pleasures, which tend to be those people in Western societies equate with happiness, are peak experiences, like watching a stunning sunset or blissing out to the 鈥淥de to Joy.鈥

Putting lessons into practice

In addition to reviewing researchers鈥 findings and ruminating on ancient wisdom, students in the Science of Happiness course (PSYC 4541) complete weekly 鈥渟cience-to-life鈥 exercises, which apply the theories and practices learned in class to everyday existence.

For instance, students kept gratitude journals, performed random acts of kindness and completed the听. Students also took 鈥,鈥 in which they visited novel, physically vast spaces and observed their surroundings mindfully.

Beyond the exercises and coursework, the students also have done outreach projects, the goal of which is to share the science of happiness outside the classroom and in the broader community.

One student, Franco Devecchi, produced a flyer highlighting research on the potential benefits of music therapy for those with autism. The flyer cites studies showing evidence that music therapy can strengthen autistic individuals鈥 sense of well-being, helping them feel more confident, accommodated and socially acceptable.

Devecchi conversed with people in campus buildings in which he distributed the flyers. In one case, Devecchi spoke with another person with autism, recalling, 鈥淲e bonded over how developmentally important music was for us growing up and discussed the gap in research when it comes to autistic adults!鈥

Another student, Indiana Wagner, completed an outreach project on the intersection of awe, psychedelics and well-being. Wagner made a presentation to Naropa University鈥檚 Intro to Psychedelics Studies course.

Wagner noted that the transformational mechanisms of awe (which can foster happiness) 鈥渉ave a lot of crossover with the transformational mechanisms of the psychedelic experience.鈥

Wagner added, 鈥淏oth awe-inducing experiences and psychedelic experiences have the ability to create a sense of 鈥榤ystical experience,鈥 which can be followed by these transformations; there's a lot of interesting literature, particularly within Johns Hopkins University, on the mystical experience from psilocybin being associated with positive changes.鈥

Wagner said many of the Naropa students seemed very interested after the presentation and asked questions relating to the subject of awe, how to incorporate it, practice it and Wagner鈥檚 own experiences with it.

And student Kate Timothy produced an outreach project on the relationship between sleep, happiness and well-being. Timothy, who completed an honors thesis about sleep disruptions and their effect on Alzheimer鈥檚 biomarkers, wanted to further understand how sleep affects well-being and share that knowledge with others.

She developed a trivia event for college students in which the questions focused on how to improve sleep and thus happiness. Timothy is a dormitory worker, and her audience was the dormitory population. 鈥淚 just asked students as they went by some trivia questions and also passed out some chocolate prizes,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t was a fun and easy way to get important information about sleep to my peers!鈥

Gruber has been recognized for her teaching. She is a President鈥檚 Teaching Scholar, has won the Boulder Faculty Assembly Teaching Excellence Award, the UROP Outstanding Mentor Award and the Cogswell Award for Inspirational Instruction.听The last award is named for and funded by Craig Cogswell, a three-time alumnus of 蜜桃传媒破解版下载, who says Gruber is an 鈥渁mazing educator and teacher.鈥

Gruber also has developed a free听online Coursera听听course to tackle stigma and mental health and has written articles听for听about the importance of听. She also shares career and professional advice for students in听.听She is currently co-authoring a textbook on the science of happiness with Dacher Keltner and colleagues at the Greater Good Science Center at UC Berkeley.


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