ABSTRACT

Are we born selfish or primed to help others?

Does stress make people more antisocial?

Can we ever be genuinely altruistic?

This book explores some of the dilemmas at the heart of being human. Integrating cutting edge studies with in-depth clinical experience, Graham Music synthesizes a wealth of fascinating research into an explanation of altruism, cooperation and generosity and shows how we are primed to turn off the ‘better angels of our nature’ in the face of stress, anxiety and fear.

Using fascinating psychological research but rooted in a clinicians understanding of the impact of stress on our moral and pro-social capacities, The Good Life covers topics as diverse as:

  • The role of parenting and family life in shaping how antisocial or pro-social we become
  • How stress, abuse and insecure attachment profoundly undermine empathic and altruistic capacities
  • The relative influence of our genes or environments on becoming big-hearted or coldly psychopathic
  • How our immediate contexts and recent social changes might tilt us towards either selfish or cooperative behaviour

This book makes a unique contribution to a subject that is increasingly on people’s minds. It does not shirk complexity, nor suggest easy explanations, but offers a hard look at the evidence in the hope that we can gain some understanding of how a ‘Good Life’ might develop. Often personally challenging, intellectually exhilarating and written with an easily accessible style, The Good Life makes sense of how our moral selves take shape, and shines a light on the roots of goodness and nastiness.

chapter Chapter 1|11 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter 2|7 pages

Primed for goodness

chapter Chapter 3|13 pages

Attachments and helping others

chapter Chapter 4|15 pages

How empathy and altruism grow

chapter Chapter 5|15 pages

Why stress can make us nasty

chapter Chapter 8|12 pages

A battle between emotion and reason?

chapter Chapter 9|12 pages

Hormones of cooperation and competition

chapter Chapter 10|18 pages

Evolved both to cooperate and compete

chapter Chapter 11|12 pages

Moral games

chapter Chapter 12|11 pages

Group-minded and narrow-minded

chapter Chapter 14|15 pages

Consumerism, society and our divided brain

chapter Chapter 15|8 pages

Conclusions