OU - Institute for the Study of Human Flourishing

Permanent URI for this community

About the Institute

The Institute for the Study of Human Flourishing is an academic center based at The University of Oklahoma. Its three-fold mission is to:

  • Advance the science of virtue both by promoting virtue research at OU and by serving as a central hub for other institutes, both in the U.S. and abroad, to facilitate collaborative research initiatives;
  • Improve the flourishing of OU students by revitalizing both the study and cultivation of virtue as part of the mission of higher education;
  • Improve the flourishing of all Oklahomans through our outreach programs in a variety of areas: to business, education, civic engagement, and parents.

Repository

Part of the Institute's mission is to offer a wide variety of resources for those interested in human flourishing, virtue and character. This repository provides a permanent home for those resources, and is updated regularly with new resources as they become available. We invite you to join our email list and connect with us on social media to stay informed of new resources, upcoming events and funding opportunities.

Moral Self Archive

The ISHF repository also hosts the Moral Self Archive, a freely available repository of moral self research, originally created and managed by the Self, Motivation and Virtue Project. The SMV Project was a 3-year initiative (Sept. 2014 - March 2018), funded by the Templeton Religion Trust, that supported innovative, interdisciplinary research on virtue and moral development, with a special focus on exploring new ways of measuring virtue and how it develops in humans. Visit the SMV Project website for more details.

The Moral Self Archive is now managed by the Institute for the Study of Human Flourishing.

Sponsors

This archive was made possible through the support of grants from the John Templeton Foundation and the Templeton Religion Trust. The views and opinions expressed by documents in this archive are those of the author(s), and do not necessarily represent the views and the opinions of the John Templeton Foundation or the Templeton Religion Trust.

Browse

Collections in this Community

Now showing 1 - 3 of 3