Matters of Meaning
If happiness isn’t the goal, what practices actually make life meaningful? In Part 2 of my conversation with philosopher Jeffrey Hanson, we move beyond definitions to explore how meaning is actually cultivated in the messy reality of daily life. We discuss why a meaningful life is often the opposite of a purely productive one, and why “getting more done” is rarely the answer to feeling fulfilled. In this episode, we explore: * The Work Trap: Why “workism” threatens flourishing, and how “job crafting” can help us reconnect our work to a larger sense of purpose. * The Infrastructure of Meaning: Why habits, rituals, and even seemingly “pointless” activities like play are essential structures that anchor us in coherence. * The Power of the Collective: The surprising link between shared rituals and wellbeing, and why community is indispensable for a meaningful life. * The Role of Struggle: Why meaning doesn’t require constant happiness, but does require embracing difficulty, growth, and coherence over time. Jeff offers a refreshing, no-nonsense look at how we can anchor ourselves in a distracted world through the very things we often overlook: our work, our rituals, and each other. Further resources (from Parts 1 and 2) * Global Flourishing Study – a large international longitudinal study (≈220,000 participants across 22 countries) led by the Harvard Human Flourishing Program. * Hanson, J. & Tyler VanderWeele (2021). The Comprehensive Measure of Meaning: Psychological and Philosophical Foundations. * Harvard Human Flourishing Program – interdisciplinary research on human flourishing. * Joshua Seachris – What Makes Life Meaningful? (2020) * Roy Baumeister – foundational psychological work on meaning, purpose, and narrative. * Susan Wolf – Meaning in Life and Why It Matters (2010) * Jeffrey Hanson – Imagination, Suffering, and Perfection: A Kierkegaardian Reflection on Meaning in Life (2011), drawing on Søren Kierkegaard. * Hannah Arendt – The Human Condition (1958) * Thomas Nagel – The View from Nowhere (1986) * Hanson, J. et al. (2022). Suffering, authenticity, and meaning in life: Toward an integrated conceptualization of well-being (Frontiers in Psychology).
15 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Matters of Meaning!