articlePerspectives on Psychological ScienceJan 1, 2011Closed access

Too Much of a Good Thing

University of Pennsylvania · Swarthmore College

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Aristotle proposed that to achieve happiness and success, people should cultivate virtues at mean or intermediate levels between deficiencies and excesses. In stark contrast to this assertion that virtues have costs at high levels, a wealth of psychological research has focused on demonstrating the well-being and performance benefits of positive traits, states, and experiences. This focus has obscured the prevalence and importance of nonmonotonic inverted-U-shaped effects, whereby positive phenomena reach inflection points at which their effects turn negative. We trace the evidence for nonmonotonic effects in psychology and provide recommendations for conceptual and empirical progress. We conclude that for…

Citation impact

646
total citations
FWCI
35.69
Percentile
100%
References
175
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Happiness
  • Assertion
  • Positive psychology
  • Psychology
  • TRACE (psycholinguistics)
  • Social psychology
  • Epistemology
  • Well-being
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