“…As examples, additional aspects of happiness and well-being that focus on the value of nature, respect for all life, respect for elders, humility, spirituality, respect for traditional leaders, and duty to community emerge when the thick descriptions offered by qualitative methods are appropriately utilized to delve deeply into the research questions and issues in ways that may be difficult or impossible with quantitative surveys and lab experiments (e.g., Fischer, 2014;Mathews & Izquierdo, 2009;Rich, 2014Rich, , 2017. Though some prominent mainstream psychologists have made calls for psychologists to internationalize and diversify their samples and utilize a broader range of methods (e.g., Arnett, 2008;Henrich, Heine, & Norenzayan, 2010;Kagan, 2012;Takooshian, Gielen, Plous, Rich, & Velayo, 2016), few positive psychologists have responded. Recent anthropological work, however, suggests that at least some academic disciplines are showing that both qualitative and quantitative methods can sensibly and productively coexist.…”