Feeling Big, Feeling Small: The Human Yearning for Significance and Wonder
Autor Sophia Moskalenko, Arie W. Kruglanskien Limba Engleză Paperback – 22 iun 2026
Blending psychology with insights from biology, development, culture, religion, history, and mental health, the book introduces a theory of Dynamic Magnitude: the idea that human flourishing depends on our ability to move fluidly between striving for significance and yielding to forces greater than ourselves. Through vivid examples drawn from everyday life, art, love, parenting, politics, extremism, ritual, and belief systems, the authors show how modern societies have come to privilege Bigness while neglecting the human need for Smallness. They explore how imbalance between these states fuels burnout, polarization, addiction, anxiety, depression, and radicalization, while their healthy alternation underlies creativity, intimacy, resilience, and meaning. Rather than offering self-help prescriptions or single-factor explanations, the book provides a unifying lens that connects personal psychology with larger cultural and historical patterns.
Written for psychologists and social scientists, this book also speaks to a wider audience of intellectually curious readers—students of culture and history, philosophers, clinicians, and thoughtful observers of contemporary life—interested in how inner experience, social forces, and meaning-making intersect.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781041082538
ISBN-10: 1041082533
Pagini: 180
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Greutate: 0.33 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1041082533
Pagini: 180
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Greutate: 0.33 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Public țintă
General, Professional Reference, and Undergraduate AdvancedCuprins
1. Feeling Big, Feeling Small: An Introduction 2. The Need that Makes the World Go Round 3. The Importance of Being Small 4. Bigness and Smallness on a Seesaw 5. It Runs in Our Blood: The Biology of Bigness and Smallness 6. From The Cradle to the Grave: Bigness and Smallness Across the Lifespan 7. The Muse and the Moneymaker: Creativity on the Seesaw 8. Cultures of Bigness and Smallness 9. The Extremes of Bigness and Smallness 10. Of Gods and Humans: Smallness and Bigness in the World’s Religions 11. Mental Health and Bigness/Smallness Dysregulation 12. Love as Dynamic Magnitude: The Interplay of Bigness and Smallness 13. So What? Index
Notă biografică
Sophia Moskalenko (Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania) is Professor of Psychology at University of Latvia, Latvia. Her research focuses on extremism, radicalization, political violence, and self-sacrifice. She has consulted the US government, as well as the UN, NATO, and the European Commission, and has published over 90 research articles and several books, including Friction: How Conflict Radicalizes Them and Us; Pastels and Pedophiles: Inside the Mind of QAnon; and Psychology of Extreme.
Arie W. Kruglanski (Ph.D., UCLA) is Distinguished University Professor of Psychology at the University of Maryland, USA, and a co-founding Principal Investigator at START, the national center of excellence for the study of terrorism and the response to terrorism. Kruglanski has published 500 articles and books on basic psychological processes and the psychology of extremism, and received numerous scientific awards including Distinguished Scientific Contribution Awards from the Society for Experimental Social Psychology, the American Psychological Association, and the Society for the Science of Motivation, and the William James Award from the Association for Psychological Science.
Arie W. Kruglanski (Ph.D., UCLA) is Distinguished University Professor of Psychology at the University of Maryland, USA, and a co-founding Principal Investigator at START, the national center of excellence for the study of terrorism and the response to terrorism. Kruglanski has published 500 articles and books on basic psychological processes and the psychology of extremism, and received numerous scientific awards including Distinguished Scientific Contribution Awards from the Society for Experimental Social Psychology, the American Psychological Association, and the Society for the Science of Motivation, and the William James Award from the Association for Psychological Science.
Recenzii
I love this book. We all know that people want to feel powerful and in control of the world around them. Feeling big is having ambition, grit, and high self-esteem. Feeling small is to feel inferior, humiliated, and weak. Our culture celebrates feeling big and our psychological science anoints it as central to human nature. In their insightful and fascinating book, Moskalenko and Kruglanski tell us a different story. They introduce us to the essential benefits of feeling small—how it underlies our experiences of wonder and being part of a greater whole. It is a must-read for all of us who want to understand what motivates our life choices and what we can do to improve them.
Sophia Moskalenko and Arie Kruglanski offer a compelling framework for understanding human flourishing, rooted in the interplay between two opposing mental states: “Bigness” and “Smallness.” Building on recent psychological research, and using personal stories and cultural references, they illuminate how we constantly switch between feeling significant and humbled. In a society that disproportionately emphasizes Bigness, this book restores the psychological value of Smallness. I was struck by the depth and breadth of their analysis and the elegance of their writing. This book is about love, war, spirituality, science, culture, and so much more. It tells us that flourishing requires embracing both states: learning to feel and value both being big and small.
This breathtaking and scholarly tour of our yearning for significance and wonder illuminates how our inclinations for the big and the vast and the small and the humble i are at the heart of what is most human -- art, religion, politics, morality, and our conscious lives. This wonderful book offers fresh insights into struggles of our times, and offers deep ideas and a blueprint for progress.
E. Tory Higgins, Stanley Schachter Professor of Psychology and Business, and Director of the Motivation Science Center at Columbia University. He is the author of Shared Reality.
Sophia Moskalenko and Arie Kruglanski offer a compelling framework for understanding human flourishing, rooted in the interplay between two opposing mental states: “Bigness” and “Smallness.” Building on recent psychological research, and using personal stories and cultural references, they illuminate how we constantly switch between feeling significant and humbled. In a society that disproportionately emphasizes Bigness, this book restores the psychological value of Smallness. I was struck by the depth and breadth of their analysis and the elegance of their writing. This book is about love, war, spirituality, science, culture, and so much more. It tells us that flourishing requires embracing both states: learning to feel and value both being big and small.
Ayelet Fishbach, Eric J. Gleacher Distinguished Service Professor of Behavioral Science and Marketing at the University of Chicago, Booth School of Business, and the author of GET IT DONE: Surprising Lessons from the Science of Motivation.
This breathtaking and scholarly tour of our yearning for significance and wonder illuminates how our inclinations for the big and the vast and the small and the humble i are at the heart of what is most human -- art, religion, politics, morality, and our conscious lives. This wonderful book offers fresh insights into struggles of our times, and offers deep ideas and a blueprint for progress.
Dacher Keltner, Distinguished Professor of Psychology, University of California, Berkeley, Director, Berkeley Social Interaction Laboratory Faculty Director, Greater Good Science Center. Chief Scientific Advisor, Hume AI, Author of Awe.
Descriere
Why do we sometimes feel powerful, expansive, and driven—only to feel small, humbled, or overwhelmed moments later? This book proposes that much of human experience is shaped by a fundamental psychological rhythm between two states the authors call Bigness and Smallness.