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The meekness behind human ‘flourishing’

Societies the world over have long sought to define and measure what constitutes a good life, a life of meaning as well as of means.

Just-published data from an expansive Global Flourishing Study (GFS) is contributing new insights into this topic. The first-round surveys in this five-year project covered more than 200,000 participants. One finding drawing widespread concern is that young people are reporting lower levels of well-being and “not doing as well as they used to,” the report said.

Yet perhaps the biggest finding, across age cohorts in 22 countries, shows that poorer nations outrank far wealthier ones in “flourishing.”

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