
Reflecting the fact that lives and cultures differ, the perspectives are pluralistic. The thirteen contributors chart new directions for understanding and securing human flourishing. Now, however, they can be addressed in light of new insights in positive psychology, psychiatry, evolutionary biology, cognitive science, and behavioral economics, as well as new research in philosophy itself, including feminist theory, critical race studies, philosophical psychology, neuro-ethics, and more.

Philosophy and Human Flourishing explores two pressing questions: What is a thriving, fulfilling, flourishing human life? What practices, associations, and institutions produce flourishing lives? These questions-in essence, “What are flourishing lives and how can we lead them?”-are long central to philosophy.
