Optimism is an outlook on life such that one maintains a view of the world as a positive place. It is the opposite of
pessimism. Optimists generally believe that people and events are inherently good, so that most situations work out in the end for the best.
A common conundrum illustrates optimism-versus-pessimism with the question, does one regard a given glass of water, filled to half its capacity, as
half full or as half empty? Conventional wisdom expects optimists to reply, "Half full," and pessimists to respond, "Half empty" (assuming that "full" is considered good, and empty, "bad").
Another paradox sometimes associated with optimism is that the only thing an optimist can't view as positive is a pessimist. Pessimism, however, as it acts as a check to recklessness, may even then be viewed in a positive light.
Philosophy
Philosophers often link the concept of optimism with the name of
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, who held that we live in the
best of all possible worlds, or that God created a physical universe that applies the laws of physics, a
theodicy which
Voltaire famously mocked in his satirical novel
Candide. The philosophical pessimism of, for instance,
Arthur Schopenhauer, provides an opposite pole to philosophical optimism.
The
anarchist philosopher
William Godwin demonstrated perhaps even more optimism than Leibniz. He hoped that society would eventually reach the state where calm reason would replace all violence and force, that mind could eventually make matter subservient to it, and that intelligence could discover the secret of
immortality. (Some express surprise to learn that a freedom-loving anarchist like William Godwin disapproved of suicide, but his disapproval came from his optimistic view of suicide as almost always a mistake.) Much of this philosophy is exemplified in the
Houyhnhnms of
Jonathan Swift's
Gulliver's Travels.
Psychology
Overoptimism, or
strong optimism, is the overarching mental state wherein people believe that things will more likely go well for them than go badly. Compare this with the
valence effect of
prediction, a tendency for people to overestimate the likelihood of good things happening rather than bad things.
Optimism bias is the demonstrated systematic tendency for people to be over-optimistic about the outcome of planned actions.
Personal optimism correlates strongly with
self-esteem, with psychological well-being and with personal health.
Martin Seligman, in researching this area, criticises academics for focusing too much on causes for pessimism and not enough on optimism. He points out that in the last three decades of the 20th century journals published 46,000 psychological papers on depression and only 400 on joy.
Optimism has been shown to be correlated with better immune systems in healthy people who have been subjected to stress.
Ideologically convinced optimists may defend failures in their hoped-for outcomes by discussing "misplaced optimism" rather than abandoning optimism altogether.
A number of scholars have suggested that, although optimism and pessimism might seem like opposites, in psychological terms they don't function in this way. Having more of one doesn't mean you've less of the other. The factors that reduce one don't necessarily increase the other. On many occasions in life we need both in equal supply.
Antonio Gramsci famously called for "pessimism of the intellect, optimism of the will": the one the spur to action, the other the resilience to believe that such action will result in meaningful change even in the face of adversity.
Hope can become a force for social change when it combines optimism and pessimism in healthy proportions.
John Braithwaite, an academic at the
Australian National University, suggests that in modern society we undervalue hope because we wrongly think of it as a choice between hopefulness and
naïveté as opposed to
scepticism and .
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