Greater Good Science Center


The Greater Good Science Center is a center located at the University of California, Berkeley.

Introduction

The Greater Good Science Center studies the psychology, sociology, and neuroscience of well-being and teaches skills that foster a thriving, resilient, and compassionate society.
Based at the University of California, Berkeley, one of the world’s leading institutions of research and higher education, the GGSC is unique in its commitment to both science and practice: The center sponsors groundbreaking scientific research into social and emotional well-being and help people apply this research to their personal and professional lives via a variety of media outlets, including an online magazine, Greater Good; a podcast, The Science of Happiness; the Greater Good in Action website; and classes and events.
The Greater Good Science Center draws upon academic fields such as psychology, sociology, education, economics, and neuroscience, trying to uncover what leads to greater well-being. Through their publication and other products—including a website of research-based practices — they teach skills to foster a thriving, resilient, and compassionate society. The GGSC’s mission involves a commitment to reporting on groundbreaking scientific research on social and emotional well-being, while helping people apply this research to their personal and professional lives.
Since 2001, the Greater Good Science Center has been at the forefront of an up and coming scientific movement to explore what makes people thrive and to advocate for kindness, empathy, compassion, resilience, purpose, and social relationships as key factors in a meaningful life. Their ultimate goal is to help people better understand human nature and to foster families, communities, and societies that nurture our better selves.

Core Beliefs

The following dates depict the achievements and or important dates that the Greater Good Science Center retrieved from 2001-2016
2001: Berkeley Center for the Development of Peace and Well-Being is founded by Thomas and Ruth Ann Hornaday, under Founding Director Dacher Keltner
2002: Center awards its first research fellowships
2004: Greater Good magazine publishes its first print issue
2006: Greater Good reaches 5,000 magazine subscribers; organization is renamed the Greater Good Science Center
2007: Launch of Half Full parenting blog, created by Christine Carter, Ph.D.
2009: Greater Good relaunches as an online magazine; GGSC initiates its Science of a Meaningful Life seminar series, with support from the Quality of Life Foundation
2010: Publication of two anthologies of Greater Good articles: The Compassionate Instinct and Are We Born Racist?
2011: 1 million+ website visitors, 2 million+ website pageviews; GGSC launches its Expanding the Science and Practice of Gratitude initiative, funded by the John Templeton Foundation
2012: GGSC launches its Education Program, with support from the Einhorn Family Charitable Trust, to meet the needs of K-12 education professionals who want to apply the science of social-emotional well-being to their work
2013: The GGSC’s Education Program hosts its first Summer Institute for Educators; the GGSC hosts its first major conference, “Practicing Mindfulness and Compassion”
2014: The Science of Happiness online course begins, enrolls more than 125,000 students in its first run
2015: GGSC launches Greater Good in Action, an online clearinghouse of the top research-based practices that foster happiness, resilience, kindness, and connection
2016: 5.5 million website visitors, 10 million+ page-views
2018: Launches Science of Happiness Podcast

Dacher Keltner

, psychology professor and director of the Greater Good Science Center at UC Berkeley for the last thirty years has been researching human emotions, starting with micro-movements of facial muscles and more recently the relationship between powerlessness and health outcomes. Having also written books and co-created one of the most popular MOOCs in the country. Keltner started to study psychology around the time that the belief that the methodology of psychological analysis changed dramatically from having implications that the human brain functioned primarily rationalizing and pure facts to toward more of an emotional revolution. Keltner dealt with anxiety throughout his life while growing up and thus set him on his goal to finding what he describes as the "greater good" and what that meant to Keltner was ultimately happiness. Major inspiration was also taken from the hit series Tv show known as Lie to Me in the sense that Keltner found influence what could potentially be a discovery into figuring out how humans truly feel even when one does not realize how they feel, and that was by analyzing micro-emotions which was what the show was based off. Micro-emotions were an idea proposed by the show Lie to Me in that Micro-emotion were a way for people to expressed how they truly felt like by using their facial expression seconds after the cause. Keltner felt that there was a study to be conducted and implications that could be made from micro-expression and so Keltner was inspired to find an answer. Soon after Keltner's daughter had died from cancer and after the events of 9/11, Keltner opened the organization known as Greater Good Science Center. Keltner proposed that he did not want the organization to become just another academic center just for sponsoring meetings, Keltner truly wanted to find the Greater Good in happiness and promote others to share the kindness and gratuity with others by exploring techniques in doing so with science.

Podcasts and Print magazine

The center produces the podcast The Science of Happiness.
Greater Good magazine was a quarterly magazine published by the center, edited by Professor Dacher Keltner, of the University of California, Berkeley, and journalist Jason Marsh. The magazine highlighted scientific research into the roots of compassion, altruism, and empathy and included stories of compassion in action, providing a bridge between social scientists and parents, educators, community leaders, and policy makers.
The magazine had been nominated by the Utne Reader as one of the top independent publications in the country.