Aging Well
Surprising Guideposts to a Happier Life from the Landmark Study of Adult Development
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی
November 5, 2001
This groundbreaking sociological analysis is based on three research projects that followed over 800 people from their adolescence through old age. Subjects were drawn from the Harvard Grant study of white males, the Inner City study of non-delinquent males and the Terman Women study of gifted females, begun respectively in 1921, 1930 and 1911. In all three studies, subjects were interviewed at regular intervals over time, a design that prevented observations from being skewed by the distortions of memory and allowed for analyses that distinguished effect from cause. Vaillant (The Natural History of Alcoholism), a psychiatrist and professor at the Harvard Medical School, brings a nuanced point of view and an acceptance of the project's limitations. (Those followed were not randomly selected and were overwhelmingly Caucasian.) Nevertheless the author makes compelling use of his data, which is based on intensive contacts with a variety of subjects. Vaillant posits that successful physical and emotional aging is most dependent on a lack of tobacco and alcohol abuse by subjects, an adaptive coping style, maintaining healthy weight with some exercise, a sustained loving (in most cases, marital) relationship and years of education. This is good news since factors that cannot be altered, such as ancestral longevity, parental characteristics and childhood temperament, were among those ruled out as predictors. The book's academic tone will reassure some readers and put others off, but Vaillant's arresting interviews with selected subjects (recounted here) and his ability to learn from the subjects make this an outstanding contribution to the study of aging. National publicity.
September 15, 2001
Revealing everything you ever wanted to know about growing older, this book is based on a Harvard Medical School study that tracked 824 people from birth to old age and is already being billed as a publishing event.
Copyright 2001 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
December 15, 2001
Vaillant, a psychiatrist interested in adult development, has been associated with three studies in that field for more than 30 years. The subjects of those studies are, respectively, 268 Harvard graduates, 456 disadvantaged inner-city men, and 90 intellectually gifted women. The figures are important because none are large or socially broad enough to be extrapolated to the general public, and Vaillant never claims otherwise. Yet, illustrating his points with highly personal case histories, he offers much valuable information about aging, and his judgment calls (his term) are perceptive, understanding, and often tinged with delightful humor. He identifies six great tasks of becoming an adult and emphasizes the necessity of social, emotional, and physical health. Unfortunately, he finds that neither wisdom nor spirituality necessarily grows with age. Still, retirement isn't inevitably a major life problem, and luck can be a decisive factor. People age individually, and predicting what a young or middle-aged person will become with age is often impossible. Vaillant, a self-described optimist nevertheless, contributes sensibly to a field famous for vapid, ivory-tower writing.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2001, American Library Association.)
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