Title page for ETD etd-08192005-130324
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Type of Document Dissertation
Author Angner, Erik
Author's Email Address angner@uab.edu
URN etd-08192005-130324
Title Subjective Measures of Well-Being: A philosophical examination
Degree Doctor of Philosophy
Program History and Philosophy of Science
School School of Arts and Sciences
Advisory Committee
Advisor Name Title
Peter Machamer Committee Chair
George Loewenstein Committee Member
Henry Krips Committee Member
Nicholas Rescher Committee Member
Keywords
  • welfare
  • measurement
  • positive psychology
  • welfare economics
  • philosophy
  • Well-being
Date of Defense 2005-06-08
Availability unrestricted
Abstract
Over the last couple of decades, as part of the rise of positive psychology, psychologists have given increasing amounts of attention to so-called subjective measures of well-being. These measures, which are supposed to represent the well-being of individuals and groups, are often presented as alternatives to more traditional economic ones for purposes of the articulation, implementation and evaluation of public policy. Unlike economic measures, which are typically based on data about income, market transactions and the like, subjective measures are based on answers to questions like: “Taking things all together, how would you say things are these days – would you say you’re very happy, pretty happy, or not too happy these days?” The aim of this dissertation is to explore issues in the philosophical foundations of subjective measures of well-being, with special emphasis on the manner in which the philosophical foundations of subjective measures differ from those of traditional economic measures. Moreover, the goal is to examine some arguments for and against these measures, and, in particular, arguments that purport to demonstrate the superiority of economic measures for purposes of public policy. My main thesis is that the claim that subjective measures of well-being cannot be shown to be inferior to economic measures quite as easily as some have suggested, but that they nevertheless are associated with serious problems, and that questions about the relative advantage of subjective and economic measures for purposes of public policy will depend on some fundamentally philosophical judgments, e.g. about the nature of well-being and the legitimate goals for public policy.
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