
Hope is an optimistic state of mind that is based on an expectation of positive outcomes with respect to events and circumstances in one's own life, or the world at large. As a verb, Merriam-Webster defines hope as "to expect with confidence" or "to cherish a desire with anticipation".

Among its opposites are dejection, hopelessness, and despair.
Hope finds expression through many dimensions of human life, including practical reasoning, the religious virtue of hope, legal doctrine, and literature, alongside cultural and mythological aspects.
In psychology
American professor of psychology Barbara Fredrickson argues that hope comes into its own when crisis looms, opening us to new creative possibilities. Frederickson argues that with great need comes an unusually wide range of ideas, as well as such positive emotions as happiness and joy, courage, and empowerment, drawn from four different areas of one's self: from a cognitive, psychological, social, or physical perspective. Such positive thinking bears fruit when based on a realistic sense of optimism, not on a naive "false hope".
The psychologist Charles R. Snyder linked hope to the existence of a goal, combined with a determined plan for reaching that goal.Alfred Adler had similarly argued for the centrality of goal-seeking in human psychology, as too had philosophical anthropologists like Ernst Bloch. Snyder also stressed the link between hope and mental willpower (hardiness), as well as the need for realistic perception of goals (problem orientation), arguing that the difference between hope and optimism was that the former can look like wishful thinking but the latter provides the energy to find practical pathways for an improved future.D. W. Winnicott saw a child's antisocial behavior as expressing as a cry for help, an unconscious hope, meaning an unspoken desire for a positive outcome for those who are in control in the wider society, when containment within the immediate family had failed.Object relations theory similarly sees the analytic transference as motivated in part by an unconscious hope that past conflicts and traumas can be dealt with anew.
Hope Theory
As a specialist in positive psychology, Snyder studied how hope and forgiveness can impact several aspects of life such as health, work, education, and personal meaning. He postulated that three main things make up hopeful thinking:
- Goals – Approaching life in a goal-oriented way.
- Pathways – Finding different ways to achieve your goals.
- Agency – Believing that you can instigate change and achieve these goals.
In other words, hope was defined as the perceived capability to derive pathways to desired goals and motivate oneself via agency thinking to use those pathways.
Snyder argues that individuals who are able to realize these three components and develop a belief in their ability are hopeful people who can establish clear goals, imagine multiple workable pathways toward those goals, and persevere, even when obstacles get in their way.
Snyder proposed a "Hope Scale" which considered that a person's determination to achieve their goal is their measured hope. Snyder differentiates between adult-measured hope and child-measured hope. The Adult Hope Scale by Snyder contains 12 questions: 4 measuring 'pathways thinking', 4 measuring 'agency thinking', and 4 that are simply fillers. Each subject responds to each question using an 8-point scale. Fibel and Hale measure hope by combining Snyder's Hope Scale with their own Generalized Expectancy for Success Scale (GESS) to empirically measure hope. Snyder regarded that psychotherapy can help focus attention on one's goals, drawing on tacit knowledge of how to reach them. Similarly, there is an outlook and a grasp of reality to hope, distinguishing No Hope, Lost Hope, False Hope and Real Hope, which differ in terms of viewpoint and realism.
Hopeful | Outlook | Wishful | Committed |
---|---|---|---|
Hopeful Outlook Distorted Reality False Hope | Hopeful Outlook Accurate Reality Real Hope | ||
Skeptical | No Hope Hopeless Outlook Distorted Reality | Lost Hope Hopeless Outlook Accurate Reality | |
Hopeless | Helpless | Surrendered | |
Grasp of Reality | |||
Uninformed Distorted Denied | Informed Accurate Assimilated |
Contemporary philosopher Richard Rorty understands hope as more than goal setting, rather as a metanarrative, a story that serves as a promise or reason for expecting a better future. Rorty as postmodernist believes past meta-narratives, including the Christian story, utilitarianism, and Marxism have proved false hopes; that theory cannot offer social hope; and that liberal man must learn to live without a consensual theory of social hope. Rorty says a new document of promise is needed for social hope to exist again.
In healthcare
Major theories
Of the countless models that examine the importance of hope in an individual's life, two major theories have gained a significant amount of recognition in the field of psychology. One of these theories, developed by Charles R. Snyder, argues that hope should be viewed as a cognitive skill that demonstrates an individual's ability to maintain drive in the pursuit of a particular goal. This model reasons that an individual's ability to be hopeful depends on two types of thinking: agency thinking and pathway thinking. Agency thinking refers to an individual's determination to achieve their goals despite possible obstacles, while pathway thinking refers to the ways in which an individual believes they can achieve these personal goals.
Snyder's theory uses hope as a mechanism that is most often seen in psychotherapy. In these instances, the therapist helps their client overcome barriers that have prevented them from achieving goals. The therapist would then help the client set realistic and relevant personal goals (i.e. "I am going to find something I am passionate about and that makes me feel good about myself"), and would help them remain hopeful of their ability to achieve these goals, and suggest the correct pathways to do so.
Whereas Snyder's theory focuses on hope as a mechanism to overcome an individual's lack of motivation to achieve goals, the other major theory developed by Kaye A. Herth deals more specifically with an individual's future goals as they relate to coping with illnesses. Herth views hope as "a motivational and cognitive attribute that is theoretically necessary to initiate and sustain action toward goal attainment". Establishing realistic and attainable goals in this situation is more difficult, as the individual most likely does not have direct control over the future of their health. Instead, Herth suggests that the goals should be concerned with how the individual is going to personally deal with the illness—"Instead of drinking to ease the pain of my illness, I am going to surround myself with friends and family".
While the nature of the goals in Snyder's model differ with those in Herth's model, they both view hope as a way to maintain personal motivation, which ultimately will result in a greater sense of optimism.
Major empirical findings
Hope, and more specifically, particularized hope, has been shown to be an important part of the recovery process from illness; it has strong psychological benefits for patients, helping them to cope more effectively with their disease. For example, hope motivates people to pursue healthy behaviors for recovery, such as eating fruits and vegetables, quitting smoking, and engaging in regular physical activity. This not only helps to enhance people's recovery from illnesses but also helps prevent illness from developing in the first place. Patients who maintain high levels of hope have an improved prognosis for life-threatening illness and an enhanced quality of life. Belief and expectation, which are key elements of hope, block pain in patients suffering from chronic illness by releasing endorphins and mimicking the effects of morphine. Consequently, through this process, belief and expectation can set off a chain reaction in the body that can make recovery from chronic illness more likely. This chain reaction is especially evident with studies demonstrating the placebo effect, a situation when hope is the only variable aiding in these patients’ recovery.
Overall, studies have demonstrated that maintaining a sense of hope during a period of recovery from illness is beneficial. A sense of hopelessness during the recovery period has, in many instances, resulted in adverse health conditions for the patient (i.e. depression and anxiety following the recovery process). Additionally, having a greater amount of hope before and during cognitive therapy has led to decreased PTSD-related depression symptoms in war veterans. Hope has also been found to be associated with more positive perceptions of subjective health. However, reviews of research literature have noted that the connections between hope and symptom severity in other mental health disorders are less clear, such as in cases of individuals with schizophrenia.
Hope is a powerful protector against chronic or life-threatening illnesses. A person’s hope (even when facing an illness that will likely end their life) can be helpful by finding joy or comfort. It can be created and focused on achieving life goals, such as meeting grandchildren or attending a child’s wedding. Hope can be an opportunity for us to process and go through events, that can be traumatic. A setback in life, an accident, or our own final months of living can be times when hope is comfort and serves as a pathway from one stage to the next.
Hope is a powerful emotion that drives us to keep working and moving forward. It gives us the power to survive. In a study conducted by Harvard, Curt Richter experimented with 12 wild rats and 12 domesticated rats. The wild rats, known for their great swimming abilities, survived for only about two minutes when placed in a glass container of water with no way of escape. In contrast, the domesticated rats survived for days. Curt attributed this difference to hope. The domesticated rats hoped to be saved from drowning, but the wild rats had no such hope, as they had never experienced rescue.
Curt decided to run another experiment with 12 wild rats. He placed them in water, and when they were about to drown, he took them out and held them briefly, creating an experience of hope. He then returned the rats to the water to observe how long they would tread water. Remarkably, they survived just as long as the domesticated rats—about 60 hours. With hope, the rats went from surviving for 2 minutes to treading water for 60 hours.
Hope is a powerful emotion. It drives us to move faster, further, and longer than we thought possible. But for hope to thrive, it must be anchored in something more powerful than ourselves. The rats had hope that a saving hand would come and lift them out of the water.
Applications
The inclusion of hope in treatment programs has potential in both physical and mental health settings. Hope as a mechanism for improved treatment has been studied in the contexts of PTSD, chronic physical illness, and terminal illness, among other disorders and ailments. Within mental health practice, clinicians have suggested using hope interventions as a supplement to more traditional cognitive behavioral therapies. In terms of support for physical illness, research suggests that hope can encourage the release of endorphins and enkephalins, which help to block pain.
Impediments
There are two main arguments based on judgment against those who are advocates of using hope to help treat severe illnesses. The first of which is that if physicians have too much hope, they may aggressively treat the patient. The physician will hold on to a small shred of hope that the patient may get better. Thus, this causes them to try methods that are costly and may have many side effects. One physician noted that she regretted having hope for her patient; it resulted in her patient suffering through three more years of pain that the patient would not have endured if the physician had realized recovery was unfeasible.
The second argument is the division between hope and wishing. Those that are hopeful are actively trying to investigate the best path of action while taking into consideration the obstacles. Research has shown though that many of those who have "hope" are wishfully thinking and passively going through the motions, as if they are in denial about their actual circumstances. Being in denial and having too much hope may negatively impact both the patient and the physician.
Benefits
The impact that hope can have on a patient's recovery process is strongly supported through both empirical research and theoretical approaches. However, reviews of literature also maintain that more longitudinal and methodologically sound research is needed to establish which hope interventions are actually the most effective, and in what setting (i.e. chronic illness vs. terminal illness).
In culture
In the matter of globalization, hope is focused on economic and social empowerment.
Focusing on parts of Asia, hope has taken on a secular or materialistic form in relation to the pursuit of economic growth. Primary examples are the rise of the economies of China and India, correlating with the notion of Chindia. A secondary relevant example is the increased use of contemporary architecture in rising economies, such as the building of the Shanghai World Financial Center, Burj Khalifa and Taipei 101, which has given rise to a prevailing hope within the countries of origin. In chaotic environments hope is transcended without cultural boundaries, Syrian refugee children are supported by UNESCO's education project through creative education and psycho-social assistance. Other inter-cultural support for instilling hope involve food culture, disengaging refugees from trauma through immersing them in their rich cultural past.
The Right to Hope
Hope has been widely recognized as a crucial and inherent aspect of human existence, not only by philosophers from various backgrounds but also by national and international courts, particularly in the past decade. Serving as an existential element within each individual, hope manifests itself in various ways in both private and public spheres. While past court considerations often focused on hopes arising from legal disputes and everyday life, the current predominant topic of discussion centers around the hope of incarcerated individuals seeking release, as in Graham v. Florida.
Riofrio's examination delves not only into specific expressions of the right to hope but also into the right to hope itself as a comprehensive concept. In this exploration, he draws connections between numerous legal doctrines addressing everyday hopes, such as the doctrines of legitimate expectations and loss of a chance.
Drawing insights from extensive case law explicitly referencing the right to hope, international legal precedents, philosophical teachings from eminent scholars, and certain theological arguments, Riofrio concludes that the unenumerated right to hope encompasses four essential elements:
- The right to have wishes, aspirations, plans, and beliefs, while avoiding actions that illegitimately discourage individuals, such as demoralizing troops during wartime.
- The right to some specific opportunities, sometimes aligning with programmatic Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights (ESCR), but also incorporating the doctrine of legitimate expectations.
- The right to the means of realizing hope, prohibiting harm to the means that grounds hope, such as the limbs of a dancer or the vision of a painter.
- The right to some established chances, wherein the doctrine of loss of a chance plays a significant role.
In literature
Hope is the thing with feathers that perches in the soul and sings the tune without the words and never stops at all.
— Emily Dickinson
A classic reference to hope which has entered modern language is the concept that "Hope springs eternal" taken from Alexander Pope's Essay on Man, the phrase reading "Hope springs eternal in the human breast, Man never is, but always to be blest:" Another popular reference, "Hope is the thing with feathers," is from a poem by Emily Dickinson.
Hope can be used as an artistic plot device and is often a motivating force for change in dynamic characters. A commonly understood reference from western popular culture is the subtitle "A New Hope" from the original first installment (now considered Episode IV) in the Star Wars science fiction space opera. The subtitle refers to one of the lead characters, Luke Skywalker, who is expected in the future to allow good to triumph over evil within the plot of the films.
The swallow has been a symbol of hope, in Aesop's fables and numerous other historic literature. It symbolizes hope, in part because it is among the first birds to appear at the end of winter and the start of spring. Other symbols of hope include the anchor and the dove.
Nietzsche took a contrarian but coherent view of hope:-
... Zeus did not wish man, however much he might be tormented by the other evils, to fling away his life, but to go on letting himself be tormented again and again. Therefore he gives Man hope,—in reality it is the worst of all evils, because it prolongs the torments of Man.
— Friedrich Nietzsche
In mythology
Elpis (Hope) appears in ancient Greek mythology with the story of Zeus and Prometheus. Prometheus stole fire from the god Zeus, which infuriated the supreme god. In turn, Zeus created a box that contained all manners of evil, unbeknownst to the receiver of the box. Pandora opened the box after being warned not to, and unleashed a multitude of harmful spirits that inflicted plagues, diseases, and illnesses on mankind. Spirits of greed, envy, hatred, mistrust, sorrow, anger, revenge, lust, and despair scattered far and wide looking for humans to torment. Inside the box, however, there was also an unreleased healing spirit named Hope. From ancient times, people have recognized that a spirit of hope had the power to heal afflictions and helps them bear times of great suffering, illnesses, disasters, loss, and pain caused by the malevolent spirits and events. In Hesiod's Works and Days, the personification of hope is named Elpis.
Norse mythology however considered Hope (Vön) to be the slobber dripping from the mouth of Fenris Wolf: their concept of courage rated most highly a cheerful bravery in the absence of hope.
In religion
Hope is a key concept in most major world religions, often signifying the "hoper" believes an individual or a collective group will reach a concept of heaven. Depending on the religion, hope can be seen as a prerequisite for and/or byproduct of spiritual attainment.
Judaism
The Jewish Encyclopedia notes "tiḳwah" (תקווה) and "seber" as terms for hope, adding that "miḳweh" and "kislah" denote the related concept of "trust" and that "toḥelet" signifies "expectation".
Christianity
Hope is one of the three theological virtues of the Christian religion, alongside faith and love. "Hope" in the Holy Bible means "a strong and confident expectation" of future reward (see Titus 1:2). In modern terms, hope is akin to trust and a confident expectation".Paul the Apostle argued that Christ was a source of hope for Christians: "For in this hope we have been saved" (see Romans 8:24).
According to the Holman Bible Dictionary, hope is a "[t]rustful expectation...the anticipation of a favorable outcome under God's guidance." In The Pilgrim's Progress, it is Hopeful who comforts Christian in Doubting Castle; while conversely at the entrance to Dante's Hell were the words, "Lay down all hope, you that go in by me".
Hinduism
In historic literature of Hinduism, hope is referred to with Pratidhi (Sanskrit: प्रतिधी), or Apêksh (Sanskrit: अपेक्ष). It is discussed with the concepts of desire and wish. In Vedic philosophy, karma was linked to ritual sacrifices (yajna), hope and success linked to correct performance of these rituals. In Vishnu Smriti, the image of hope, morals and work is represented as the virtuous man who rides in a chariot directed by his hopeful mind to his desired wishes, drawn by his five senses, who keeps the chariot on the path of the virtuous, and thus is not distracted by the wrongs such as wrath, greed, and other vices.
In the centuries that followed, the concept of karma changed from sacramental rituals to actual human action that builds and serves society and human existence–a philosophy epitomized in the Bhagavad Gita. Hope, in the structure of beliefs and motivations, is a long-term karmic concept. In Hindu belief, actions have consequences, and while one's effort and work may or may not bear near term fruits, it will serve the good, that the journey of one's diligent efforts (karma) and how one pursues the journey, sooner or later leads to bliss and moksha.
Buddhism
Buddhism's teachings are centered around the concept of hope. It puts those who are suffering on a path to a more harmonious world and better well-being. Hope acts as a light to those who are lost or suffering. Factors of Saddha (faith), wisdom, and aspiration work together to form practical hope. Practical hope is the foundation of putting those suffering on a path toward inner freedom and holistic well-being. It instills the belief in positive outcomes even in the midst of suffering and adversity.
See also
- Defeatism
- Disappointment
- El Dorado
- Micawberism
- Optimism
- "Self-Reliance"
- The Principle of Hope
- Utopianism
- Spe salvi
References
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Further reading
- Averill, James R. Rules of hope. Springer-Verlag, 1990.
- Miceli, Maria and Cristiano Castelfranchi. "Hope: The Power of Wish and Possibility" in Theory Psychology. April 2010 vol. 20 no. 2 251–276.
- Kierkegaard, Søren A. The Sickness Unto Death. Princeton University Press, 1995.
- Snyder, C. R. Handbook of hope: theory, measures, & applications. Academic [Press], 2000.
- Stout, Larry. Ideal Leadership: Time for a Change. Destiny Image, 2006
Hope is an optimistic state of mind that is based on an expectation of positive outcomes with respect to events and circumstances in one s own life or the world at large As a verb Merriam Webster defines hope as to expect with confidence or to cherish a desire with anticipation A Syrian refugee girl with a hopeful expression Among its opposites are dejection hopelessness and despair Hope finds expression through many dimensions of human life including practical reasoning the religious virtue of hope legal doctrine and literature alongside cultural and mythological aspects In psychologyHope which lay at the bottom of the box remained Allegorical painting by George Frederic Watts 1886 American professor of psychology Barbara Fredrickson argues that hope comes into its own when crisis looms opening us to new creative possibilities Frederickson argues that with great need comes an unusually wide range of ideas as well as such positive emotions as happiness and joy courage and empowerment drawn from four different areas of one s self from a cognitive psychological social or physical perspective Such positive thinking bears fruit when based on a realistic sense of optimism not on a naive false hope The psychologist Charles R Snyder linked hope to the existence of a goal combined with a determined plan for reaching that goal Alfred Adler had similarly argued for the centrality of goal seeking in human psychology as too had philosophical anthropologists like Ernst Bloch Snyder also stressed the link between hope and mental willpower hardiness as well as the need for realistic perception of goals problem orientation arguing that the difference between hope and optimism was that the former can look like wishful thinking but the latter provides the energy to find practical pathways for an improved future D W Winnicott saw a child s antisocial behavior as expressing as a cry for help an unconscious hope meaning an unspoken desire for a positive outcome for those who are in control in the wider society when containment within the immediate family had failed Object relations theory similarly sees the analytic transference as motivated in part by an unconscious hope that past conflicts and traumas can be dealt with anew Hope Theory As a specialist in positive psychology Snyder studied how hope and forgiveness can impact several aspects of life such as health work education and personal meaning He postulated that three main things make up hopeful thinking Goals Approaching life in a goal oriented way Pathways Finding different ways to achieve your goals Agency Believing that you can instigate change and achieve these goals A rose expressing hope at Auschwitz concentration camp In other words hope was defined as the perceived capability to derive pathways to desired goals and motivate oneself via agency thinking to use those pathways Snyder argues that individuals who are able to realize these three components and develop a belief in their ability are hopeful people who can establish clear goals imagine multiple workable pathways toward those goals and persevere even when obstacles get in their way Snyder proposed a Hope Scale which considered that a person s determination to achieve their goal is their measured hope Snyder differentiates between adult measured hope and child measured hope The Adult Hope Scale by Snyder contains 12 questions 4 measuring pathways thinking 4 measuring agency thinking and 4 that are simply fillers Each subject responds to each question using an 8 point scale Fibel and Hale measure hope by combining Snyder s Hope Scale with their own Generalized Expectancy for Success Scale GESS to empirically measure hope Snyder regarded that psychotherapy can help focus attention on one s goals drawing on tacit knowledge of how to reach them Similarly there is an outlook and a grasp of reality to hope distinguishing No Hope Lost Hope False Hope and Real Hope which differ in terms of viewpoint and realism Hopeful Outlook Wishful CommittedHopeful Outlook Distorted Reality False Hope Hopeful Outlook Accurate Reality Real HopeSkeptical No Hope Hopeless Outlook Distorted Reality Lost Hope Hopeless Outlook Accurate RealityHopeless Helpless SurrenderedGrasp of RealityUninformed Distorted Denied Informed Accurate Assimilated Contemporary philosopher Richard Rorty understands hope as more than goal setting rather as a metanarrative a story that serves as a promise or reason for expecting a better future Rorty as postmodernist believes past meta narratives including the Christian story utilitarianism and Marxism have proved false hopes that theory cannot offer social hope and that liberal man must learn to live without a consensual theory of social hope Rorty says a new document of promise is needed for social hope to exist again In healthcareMajor theories Of the countless models that examine the importance of hope in an individual s life two major theories have gained a significant amount of recognition in the field of psychology One of these theories developed by Charles R Snyder argues that hope should be viewed as a cognitive skill that demonstrates an individual s ability to maintain drive in the pursuit of a particular goal This model reasons that an individual s ability to be hopeful depends on two types of thinking agency thinking and pathway thinking Agency thinking refers to an individual s determination to achieve their goals despite possible obstacles while pathway thinking refers to the ways in which an individual believes they can achieve these personal goals Snyder s theory uses hope as a mechanism that is most often seen in psychotherapy In these instances the therapist helps their client overcome barriers that have prevented them from achieving goals The therapist would then help the client set realistic and relevant personal goals i e I am going to find something I am passionate about and that makes me feel good about myself and would help them remain hopeful of their ability to achieve these goals and suggest the correct pathways to do so Whereas Snyder s theory focuses on hope as a mechanism to overcome an individual s lack of motivation to achieve goals the other major theory developed by Kaye A Herth deals more specifically with an individual s future goals as they relate to coping with illnesses Herth views hope as a motivational and cognitive attribute that is theoretically necessary to initiate and sustain action toward goal attainment Establishing realistic and attainable goals in this situation is more difficult as the individual most likely does not have direct control over the future of their health Instead Herth suggests that the goals should be concerned with how the individual is going to personally deal with the illness Instead of drinking to ease the pain of my illness I am going to surround myself with friends and family While the nature of the goals in Snyder s model differ with those in Herth s model they both view hope as a way to maintain personal motivation which ultimately will result in a greater sense of optimism Major empirical findings Hope and more specifically particularized hope has been shown to be an important part of the recovery process from illness it has strong psychological benefits for patients helping them to cope more effectively with their disease For example hope motivates people to pursue healthy behaviors for recovery such as eating fruits and vegetables quitting smoking and engaging in regular physical activity This not only helps to enhance people s recovery from illnesses but also helps prevent illness from developing in the first place Patients who maintain high levels of hope have an improved prognosis for life threatening illness and an enhanced quality of life Belief and expectation which are key elements of hope block pain in patients suffering from chronic illness by releasing endorphins and mimicking the effects of morphine Consequently through this process belief and expectation can set off a chain reaction in the body that can make recovery from chronic illness more likely This chain reaction is especially evident with studies demonstrating the placebo effect a situation when hope is the only variable aiding in these patients recovery Overall studies have demonstrated that maintaining a sense of hope during a period of recovery from illness is beneficial A sense of hopelessness during the recovery period has in many instances resulted in adverse health conditions for the patient i e depression and anxiety following the recovery process Additionally having a greater amount of hope before and during cognitive therapy has led to decreased PTSD related depression symptoms in war veterans Hope has also been found to be associated with more positive perceptions of subjective health However reviews of research literature have noted that the connections between hope and symptom severity in other mental health disorders are less clear such as in cases of individuals with schizophrenia Hope is a powerful protector against chronic or life threatening illnesses A person s hope even when facing an illness that will likely end their life can be helpful by finding joy or comfort It can be created and focused on achieving life goals such as meeting grandchildren or attending a child s wedding Hope can be an opportunity for us to process and go through events that can be traumatic A setback in life an accident or our own final months of living can be times when hope is comfort and serves as a pathway from one stage to the next Hope is a powerful emotion that drives us to keep working and moving forward It gives us the power to survive In a study conducted by Harvard Curt Richter experimented with 12 wild rats and 12 domesticated rats The wild rats known for their great swimming abilities survived for only about two minutes when placed in a glass container of water with no way of escape In contrast the domesticated rats survived for days Curt attributed this difference to hope The domesticated rats hoped to be saved from drowning but the wild rats had no such hope as they had never experienced rescue Curt decided to run another experiment with 12 wild rats He placed them in water and when they were about to drown he took them out and held them briefly creating an experience of hope He then returned the rats to the water to observe how long they would tread water Remarkably they survived just as long as the domesticated rats about 60 hours With hope the rats went from surviving for 2 minutes to treading water for 60 hours Hope is a powerful emotion It drives us to move faster further and longer than we thought possible But for hope to thrive it must be anchored in something more powerful than ourselves The rats had hope that a saving hand would come and lift them out of the water Applications The inclusion of hope in treatment programs has potential in both physical and mental health settings Hope as a mechanism for improved treatment has been studied in the contexts of PTSD chronic physical illness and terminal illness among other disorders and ailments Within mental health practice clinicians have suggested using hope interventions as a supplement to more traditional cognitive behavioral therapies In terms of support for physical illness research suggests that hope can encourage the release of endorphins and enkephalins which help to block pain Impediments There are two main arguments based on judgment against those who are advocates of using hope to help treat severe illnesses The first of which is that if physicians have too much hope they may aggressively treat the patient The physician will hold on to a small shred of hope that the patient may get better Thus this causes them to try methods that are costly and may have many side effects One physician noted that she regretted having hope for her patient it resulted in her patient suffering through three more years of pain that the patient would not have endured if the physician had realized recovery was unfeasible The second argument is the division between hope and wishing Those that are hopeful are actively trying to investigate the best path of action while taking into consideration the obstacles Research has shown though that many of those who have hope are wishfully thinking and passively going through the motions as if they are in denial about their actual circumstances Being in denial and having too much hope may negatively impact both the patient and the physician Benefits The impact that hope can have on a patient s recovery process is strongly supported through both empirical research and theoretical approaches However reviews of literature also maintain that more longitudinal and methodologically sound research is needed to establish which hope interventions are actually the most effective and in what setting i e chronic illness vs terminal illness In cultureIn the matter of globalization hope is focused on economic and social empowerment Focusing on parts of Asia hope has taken on a secular or materialistic form in relation to the pursuit of economic growth Primary examples are the rise of the economies of China and India correlating with the notion of Chindia A secondary relevant example is the increased use of contemporary architecture in rising economies such as the building of the Shanghai World Financial Center Burj Khalifa and Taipei 101 which has given rise to a prevailing hope within the countries of origin In chaotic environments hope is transcended without cultural boundaries Syrian refugee children are supported by UNESCO s education project through creative education and psycho social assistance Other inter cultural support for instilling hope involve food culture disengaging refugees from trauma through immersing them in their rich cultural past The Right to HopeHope has been widely recognized as a crucial and inherent aspect of human existence not only by philosophers from various backgrounds but also by national and international courts particularly in the past decade Serving as an existential element within each individual hope manifests itself in various ways in both private and public spheres While past court considerations often focused on hopes arising from legal disputes and everyday life the current predominant topic of discussion centers around the hope of incarcerated individuals seeking release as in Graham v Florida Riofrio s examination delves not only into specific expressions of the right to hope but also into the right to hope itself as a comprehensive concept In this exploration he draws connections between numerous legal doctrines addressing everyday hopes such as the doctrines of legitimate expectations and loss of a chance Drawing insights from extensive case law explicitly referencing the right to hope international legal precedents philosophical teachings from eminent scholars and certain theological arguments Riofrio concludes that the unenumerated right to hope encompasses four essential elements The right to have wishes aspirations plans and beliefs while avoiding actions that illegitimately discourage individuals such as demoralizing troops during wartime The right to some specific opportunities sometimes aligning with programmatic Economic Social and Cultural Rights ESCR but also incorporating the doctrine of legitimate expectations The right to the means of realizing hope prohibiting harm to the means that grounds hope such as the limbs of a dancer or the vision of a painter The right to some established chances wherein the doctrine of loss of a chance plays a significant role In literatureEngraving of Pandora trying to close the box that she had opened out of curiosity At left the evils of the world taunt her as they escape The engraving is based on a painting by F S Church Hope is the thing with feathers that perches in the soul and sings the tune without the words and never stops at all Emily Dickinson A classic reference to hope which has entered modern language is the concept that Hope springs eternal taken from Alexander Pope s Essay on Man the phrase reading Hope springs eternal in the human breast Man never is but always to be blest Another popular reference Hope is the thing with feathers is from a poem by Emily Dickinson Hope can be used as an artistic plot device and is often a motivating force for change in dynamic characters A commonly understood reference from western popular culture is the subtitle A New Hope from the original first installment now considered Episode IV in the Star Wars science fiction space opera The subtitle refers to one of the lead characters Luke Skywalker who is expected in the future to allow good to triumph over evil within the plot of the films The swallow has been a symbol of hope in Aesop s fables and numerous other historic literature It symbolizes hope in part because it is among the first birds to appear at the end of winter and the start of spring Other symbols of hope include the anchor and the dove Nietzsche took a contrarian but coherent view of hope Zeus did not wish man however much he might be tormented by the other evils to fling away his life but to go on letting himself be tormented again and again Therefore he gives Man hope in reality it is the worst of all evils because it prolongs the torments of Man Friedrich NietzscheIn mythologyElpis Hope appears in ancient Greek mythology with the story of Zeus and Prometheus Prometheus stole fire from the god Zeus which infuriated the supreme god In turn Zeus created a box that contained all manners of evil unbeknownst to the receiver of the box Pandora opened the box after being warned not to and unleashed a multitude of harmful spirits that inflicted plagues diseases and illnesses on mankind Spirits of greed envy hatred mistrust sorrow anger revenge lust and despair scattered far and wide looking for humans to torment Inside the box however there was also an unreleased healing spirit named Hope From ancient times people have recognized that a spirit of hope had the power to heal afflictions and helps them bear times of great suffering illnesses disasters loss and pain caused by the malevolent spirits and events In Hesiod s Works and Days the personification of hope is named Elpis dd Norse mythology however considered Hope Von to be the slobber dripping from the mouth of Fenris Wolf their concept of courage rated most highly a cheerful bravery in the absence of hope In religionHope is a key concept in most major world religions often signifying the hoper believes an individual or a collective group will reach a concept of heaven Depending on the religion hope can be seen as a prerequisite for and or byproduct of spiritual attainment Judaism The Jewish Encyclopedia notes tiḳwah תקווה and seber as terms for hope adding that miḳweh and kislah denote the related concept of trust and that toḥelet signifies expectation Christianity People collecting the miraculous water in Lourdes France Hope is one of the three theological virtues of the Christian religion alongside faith and love Hope in the Holy Bible means a strong and confident expectation of future reward see Titus 1 2 In modern terms hope is akin to trust and a confident expectation Paul the Apostle argued that Christ was a source of hope for Christians For in this hope we have been saved see Romans 8 24 According to the Holman Bible Dictionary hope is a t rustful expectation the anticipation of a favorable outcome under God s guidance In The Pilgrim s Progress it is Hopeful who comforts Christian in Doubting Castle while conversely at the entrance to Dante s Hell were the words Lay down all hope you that go in by me Hinduism In historic literature of Hinduism hope is referred to with Pratidhi Sanskrit प रत ध or Apeksh Sanskrit अप क ष It is discussed with the concepts of desire and wish In Vedic philosophy karma was linked to ritual sacrifices yajna hope and success linked to correct performance of these rituals In Vishnu Smriti the image of hope morals and work is represented as the virtuous man who rides in a chariot directed by his hopeful mind to his desired wishes drawn by his five senses who keeps the chariot on the path of the virtuous and thus is not distracted by the wrongs such as wrath greed and other vices In the centuries that followed the concept of karma changed from sacramental rituals to actual human action that builds and serves society and human existence a philosophy epitomized in the Bhagavad Gita Hope in the structure of beliefs and motivations is a long term karmic concept In Hindu belief actions have consequences and while one s effort and work may or may not bear near term fruits it will serve the good that the journey of one s diligent efforts karma and how one pursues the journey sooner or later leads to bliss and moksha Buddhism Buddhism s teachings are centered around the concept of hope It puts those who are suffering on a path to a more harmonious world and better well being Hope acts as a light to those who are lost or suffering Factors of Saddha faith wisdom and aspiration work together to form practical hope Practical hope is the foundation of putting those suffering on a path toward inner freedom and holistic well being It instills the belief in positive outcomes even in the midst of suffering and adversity See alsoDefeatism Disappointment El Dorado Micawberism Optimism Self Reliance The Principle of Hope Utopianism Spe salviReferences Hope Define Hope at Dictionary com Dictionary reference com 1992 11 27 Retrieved 2012 10 02 Hope Definition and More from the Free Merriam Webster Dictionary Merriam webster com Retrieved 2012 10 02 B Kirkpatrick ed Roget s Thesaurus 1995 pp 852 3 Fredrickson Barbara L 2009 03 23 Why Choose Hope Psychology Today Retrieved 2012 10 02 Fredrickson Barbara L et al 2008 Open Hearts Build Lives Positive Emotions Induced Through Loving Kindness Meditation Build Consequential Personal Resources PDF Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 95 pp 1045 1062 Archived from the original PDF on 2020 04 04 Retrieved 2012 10 02 a href wiki Template Cite web title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link CS1 maint numeric names authors list link D Goleman Emotional Intelligence 1996 p 88 Roth Leopold Helmut Otto 2021 Factor structure of the Top Ten positive emotions of Barbara Fredrickson Frontiers in Psychology 12 641804 doi 10 3389 fpsyg 2021 641804 PMC 8162787 PMID 34054647 Breaking down Barack Obama s Psychology of Hope and how it may help you in trying times Wellness Disease Prevention And Stress Reduction Information Mentalhelp net 2008 11 05 Archived from the original on November 10 2012 Retrieved 2012 10 02 Eric Berne What Do You Say After You Say Hello 1974 p 57 8 Peter Berger A Rumour of Angels 1973 p 79 Snyder Charles D The Psychology of Hope You Can Get Here from There New York The Free Press 1994 pp 7 8 D Zurilla Thomas J Nezu Arthur M 1999 Problem solving Therapy A Social Competence Approach to Clinical Intervention New York Springer Publishing ISBN 978 0 8261 1266 8 Snyder Charles D The Psychology of Hope You Can Get Here from There New York The Free Press 1994 pg 19 D W Winnicott The Child the Family and the Outside World 1973 pp 228 9 P Casement Further Learning from the Patient 1990 p 7 Hope Theory PDF Teachingpsychology files wordpress com Retrieved 2017 06 13 Snyder C R Rand K L amp Sigmon D R 2002 Hope Theory A Member of the Positive Psychology Family In C R Snyder amp S J Lopez Eds Handbook of positive psychology pp 257 276 New York Oxford University Press Self concept Hope and Achievement A look at the relationship between the individual self concept level of hope and academic achievement Missouriwestern edu 1997 05 01 Archived from the original on November 28 2012 Retrieved 2012 10 02 Snyder Charles D The Psychology of Hope You Can Get Here from There New York The Free Press 1994 p 10 Emotional Competency Hope www emotionalcompetency com Retrieved 9 June 2017 D L Hall Richard Rorty 1994 p 150 and p 232 Rorty Richard Philosophy and Social Hope London Penguin Books 1999 Snyder C R 1994 The Psychology of Hope New York NY Free Press ISBN 9780029297155 Weis Robert Speridakos Elena 2011 A Meta Analysis of Hope Enhancement Strategies in Clinical and Community Setting Psychology of Well Being Theory Research and Practice 1 5 doi 10 1186 2211 1522 1 5 Herth K A 2000 Enhancing hope in people with a first recurrence of cancer Journal of Advanced Nursing 32 6 1431 1441 doi 10 1046 j 1365 2648 2000 01619 x PMID 11136411 Wiles R Cott C Gibson B E 2008 Hope expectations and recovery from illness A narrative synthesis of qualitative research Journal of Advanced Nursing 64 6 564 573 doi 10 1111 j 1365 2648 2008 04815 x PMID 19120569 Enayati Amanda How hope can help you heal CNN Retrieved 20 April 2015 Simonik T Reflections on hope and recovery National Eating Disorder Information Centre Retrieved April 20 2015 How to Spot and Overcome Hopelessness in Recovery New Hope Ranch July 2021 Retrieved Nov 19 2022 Phillips Suzanne August 2012 Does Hope Really Make a Difference Scientific Findings PsychCentral Archived from the original on 21 April 2015 Retrieved 20 April 2015 Schrank Beate Stanghellini G Slade M 2008 Hope in psychiatry a review of the literature Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica Submitted manuscript 118 6 421 33 doi 10 1111 j 1600 0447 2008 01271 x PMID 18851720 S2CID 205802998 Stern Adam 16 July 2021 Hope Why it matters Retrieved November 19 2022 Richter Curt July 1957 On the Phenomenon of Sudden Death in Animals and Man Retrieved December 1 2024 Jarrett Christian Is it ethical to instill false hope Research Digest Retrieved 2 April 2015 Moisi Dominique The Culture of Hope The Geopolitics of Emotion How Cultures of Fear Humiliation and Hope Are Reshaping the World New York Doubleday 2009 30 55 Print Five stories of hope from Zaatari refugee camp United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization www unesco org Retrieved 9 June 2017 Refugees United Nations High Commissioner for Berlin refugee guides show off cultural riches from home Retrieved 9 June 2017 Graham v Florida 560 U S 48 2010 Justia Law Retrieved 2024 01 15 Riofrio Juan Carlos 2023 10 01 The Right To Hope A New Perspective Of The Right To Have Expectations Opportunities And Plans Washington and Lee Journal of Civil Rights and Social Justice 30 1 79 ISSN 1535 0843 SparkNotes Dickinson s Poetry Hope is the thing with feathers Pope Alexander 1811 An essay on man Alexander Pope Google Boeken Retrieved 2012 10 02 Dickinson Emily Hope is the thing with feathers Retrieved 2012 10 02 A New Hope Star Wars IMDb com Retrieved 2012 10 02 Christos A Zafiropoulos 2001 Ethics in Aesop s Fables The Augustana Collection ISBN 978 9004118676 Brill Academic page 61 Hope B Werness 2006 The Continuum Encyclopedia of Animal Symbolism in Art ISBN 978 0826419132 page 395 M Ferber A Dictionary of Literary Symbolism 2007 Anchor J Matthews The Grail Tradition 2011 p 67 Human All Too Human 1878 23 November 2019 Magaletta Philip R amp Oliver J M April 1999 The Hope Construct Will and Ways Their Relations with Self Efficacy Optimism and General Well Being Journal of Clinical Psychology 55 5 539 551 doi 10 1002 SICI 1097 4679 199905 55 5 lt 539 AID JCLP2 gt 3 0 CO 2 G PMID 10392785 a href wiki Template Cite journal title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Tom Shippey J R R Tolkien 2001 p 153 Tom Shippey The Road to Middle Earth 1992 p 140 3 Kohler K Guttmacher A Hope Jewish Encyclopedia accessed 16 February 2023 hope A Dictionary of Phrase and Fable Edited by Elizabeth Knowles Oxford University Press 2006 Oxford University Press Meaning of Hope Bible Definition Bible library com Archived from the original on April 2 2012 Retrieved 2012 10 02 Hope Bible org Worlds Largest Bible Study Site Bible org Retrieved 2012 10 02 HOPE Holman Bible Dictionary on Studylight org Retrieved 2012 10 02 Dante Hell 1975 p 85 prati dhi Sanskrit Lexicon University of Koeln Germany 2009 see page 666 Apeksh Sanskrit Lexicon University of Koeln Germany 2009 see page 56 apekSA Archived 2017 06 30 at the Wayback Machine Spoken Sanskrit English dictionary Version 4 2 Germany 2008 De John Romus 1995 Karma and Bhakti ways of Salvation A Christological Perspective Indian Journal of Theology Volume 37 Issue 1 pages 1 14 De Smet R 1977 A Copernican Reversal The Gitakara s Reformulation of Karma Philosophy East and West 27 1 pages 53 63 Maurice Bloomfield The Mind as Wish Car in the Veda Journal of the American Oriental Society Volume 39 pages 280 282 David Krieger 1989 Salvation in the World A Hindu Christian Dialogue on Hope and Liberation in Jerald Gort Editor Dialogue and Syncretism An Interdisciplinary Approach ISBN 0 8028 0501 9 see Chapter 14 Jeffrey Wattles The Concept of Karma in the Bhagawad Gita Department of Philosophy Wabash Center Kent State University 2002 Bennett Oliver 2011 03 22 The manufacture of hope religion eschatology and the culture of optimism International Journal of Cultural Policy 17 2 115 130 doi 10 1080 10286632 2010 543462 ISSN 1028 6632 S2CID 11071239 Ask the Teachers What is the Buddhist view of hope Lion s Roar Retrieved 2024 04 06 Further readingAverill James R Rules of hope Springer Verlag 1990 Miceli Maria and Cristiano Castelfranchi Hope The Power of Wish and Possibility in Theory Psychology April 2010 vol 20 no 2 251 276 Kierkegaard Soren A The Sickness Unto Death Princeton University Press 1995 Snyder C R Handbook of hope theory measures amp applications Academic Press 2000 Stout Larry Ideal Leadership Time for a Change Destiny Image 2006Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hope Wikiquote has quotations related to Hope