
William Damon
· ProfessorStanford University · Social and Cultural Analysis in Education
Active 1932–2025
About
William Damon is a Professor of Education at Stanford University, serving as the Director of the Stanford Center on Adolescence and a Senior Fellow, by courtesy, at the Hoover Institution. He is recognized as one of the world's leading researchers on human development across the lifespan and has pioneered the scientific study of purpose in life. Damon's work includes authoring several influential books such as The Path to Purpose, Greater Expectations, Some Do Care: Lives of Moral Commitment, Good Work: When Excellence and Ethics Meet, and A Round of Golf with my Father: The New Psychology of Exploring your Past to Make Peace with your Present. His recent research focuses on the development of purpose in adulthood and in American higher education. Damon has been elected to the National Academy of Education and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, highlighting his significant contributions to the field.
Research topics
- Psychology
- Social psychology
- Sociology
- Epistemology
- Political Science
- Public relations
- Cognitive science
- Cognitive psychology
- Philosophy
- Psychoanalysis
Selected publications
The Psychology of Purpose: A Comprehensive Approach
Review of General Psychology · 2025-03-04 · 12 citations
articleOpen access1st authorCorrespondingPurpose has long been identified in philosophy and theology as an essential component of a well-directed life. In recent years, support for this longstanding philosophical intuition has come from a rapidly increasing set of studies in psychological science that has examined the nature, origins, development, and positive life outcomes of purpose. Yet this line of research has been limited by unexamined variations in how researchers across multiple labs define and conceptualize purpose. The present review examines prevailing definitions of purpose in present psychological research, discussing the strengths and limitations of each. Three approaches to conceptualizing and defining purpose emerged from this review: The first approach focuses on “ sense of purpose,” drawing on self-reflections structured by survey items such as “ There is a direction in my life. ” The second focuses on general states of psychological well-being, viewing purpose as a subcomponent of such states. The third views purpose as a unique psychological process that combines thought, action, long-term goals, and key features of self-identity. This review describes the features of each approach that present value for future research and practice in the field; and it offers a comprehensive definition that aims to capture the full nature of the psychology of purpose.
Explorations in Progress, Positivity, and Purpose
Cambridge University Press eBooks · 2025-02-18
book-chapter1st authorCorrespondingPurpose development in the context of higher education
Applied Developmental Science · 2024-09-14 · 5 citations
article1st authorFamily purpose: an empirical investigation of collective purpose
The Journal of Positive Psychology · 2023 · 8 citations
- Sociology
- Political Science
- Social psychology
Individual purpose is associated with positive outcomes. Collective purpose, or an enduring intention shared among members of a group for how they seek to contribute to the world beyond their group, may be similarly beneficial. Collective purposes stand to benefit the groups that pursue them as well as the communities that groups find purpose in serving. Despite this, limited research has explored collective purposes. As an instance of collective purpose, the present study explored family purpose. Interviews were conducted with members (N = 87) of 25 families. Findings suggest family purposes exist, they take varied forms based on the target of family members’ shared commitments, and several factors support their pursuit, including shared moral and/or civic virtues, cohesive family structures, family purpose champions, foundational religious beliefs, humble leaders, and shared family identities. Implications of these findings, both for the study of family purpose in particular and collective purposes more generally, are addressed.
10 EDUCATION FOR A PURPOSEFUL LIFE
Columbia University Press eBooks · 2022-06-02 · 5 citations
book-chapter1st authorCorrespondingLes tactiques spatiales des tribunaux pénaux et les aspects politiques de la technique juridique
Clio Themis · 2022-01-01
articleOpen accessCet article porte sur le recours grandissant aux conditions à caractère spatial ou géographique, telles que des conditions de ne pas se trouver dans certains lieux publics, de respecter un quadrilatère ou un couvre-feu, une interdiction de communiquer ou encore une interdiction de manifester, imposées dans des ordonnances de mise en liberté ou lors de la détermination de la peine dans le cadre de procédures criminelles. Ces conditions ont des conséquences importantes sur les populations en situation d’itinérance et marginalisées et n’ont pas encore été explorées en profondeur dans la littérature. Contrairement à d’autres formes mieux connues de régulation spatiale, telles que la législation ou les stratégies policières, ces ordonnances s’appuient sur des règles de procédure criminelle bien établies et des pratiques judiciaires routinières. Afin de mieux comprendre ces tactiques spatiales ainsi que leurs conséquences sur les droits des personnes marginalisées et leur utilisation des espaces publics, nous suggérons qu’il est impératif de s’intéresser aux rationalités juridiques et aux pratiques qui soutiennent ces ordonnances.
Scientific and Ethical Mandates in the Study of Purpose
Human Development · 2022-01-01 · 3 citations
articleOpen accessSenior authorWe appreciate the letter by Hill and Pfund about our commentary and the opportunity to respond to it. It is exactly this type of interchange that advances understanding and clarity of communication in the scholarly community. The object of our commentary (Bronk & Damon, 2021, “What makes a purpose ‘worth having’) was a thoughtful Human Development article by Burrow et al. (2021) entitled “Are all purposes worth having?” It should be clear from the titles of our commentary and the original article that the question explored by both pieces is how to determine whether a purpose chosen by a young person is worth having. The question is not “What makes a purpose a purpose?” Yet the authors of the present letter intermingle the two questions. Our response to their letter explains the important distinction between the two questions and summarize our views on each.
What Makes a Purpose “Worth Having”?
Human Development · 2021 · 5 citations
Senior authorCorresponding- Psychology
- Epistemology
- Cognitive psychology
モラルを育む「理想」の力 : 人はいかにして道徳的に生きられるのか
北大路書房 eBooks · 2020-01-01
book1st authorCorresponding第1章 道徳性の新しい科学の誤った展開 第2章 能動的で理想を追求する、動機づけられた道徳的自己 第3章 完全なる道徳性心理学を目指して 第4章 誠実 第5章 謙虚さ 第6章 信じる心 第7章 道徳的真実への普遍的な探求
New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development · 2020-03-01
paratextOpen access, US$777 (Rest of World), 509 (Europe), 408 (UK
Frequent coauthors
- 30 shared
Megan M. McClelland
- 19 shared
Daniel Hart
University of Pretoria
- 18 shared
Anne Colby
- 12 shared
Kendall Cotton Bronk
- 12 shared
Christina Cameron
Université de Montréal
- 12 shared
Erin Phelps
- 10 shared
Heather Malin
- 9 shared
Richard M. Burton
Duke University
Education
Ph.D.
Stanford University
Awards & honors
- Member of the National Academy of Education
- Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
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