This study explores self-related outcomes (e.g., esteem, self-concept clarity, existential well-being) as a function of the interaction between self-reported levels of death fear and death denial. Consistent with the idea that positive existential growth can come from individuals facing, rather than denying, their mortality (Cozzolino, 2006), the authors observed that not fearing and denying death can bolster important positive components of the self. That is, individuals low in death denial and death fear evidenced an enhanced self that is valued, clearly conceived, efficacious, and that has meaning and purpose. © 2014 Copyright Taylor & Francis Group, LLC
A thesis submitted to the University of Bedfordshire, in partial fulfilment of the requirements for ...
People seem to have a tendency to increase the relative size of self-representational objects. Prior...
Attitudes to our own mortality are characterized by more than just fear, suggests Bob Plant
This study explores self-related outcomes (e.g., esteem, self-concept clarity, existential well-bein...
This study explores self-related outcomes (e.g., esteem, self-concept clarity, existential well-bein...
Do people lose hope when thinking about death? Based on Terror Management Theory, we predicted that ...
Do people lose hope when thinking about death? Based on Terror Management Theory, we predicted that...
The psychology underlying individuals' attempts to pursue a path of growth as a result of death cont...
Near-death experiences (NDE) are intense events that can have profound psychological consequences. A...
There are two certainties in life: we are born, and we will die. Everything in between birth and dea...
An inevitable and inconvenient truth of human existence is our eventual demise. The topic of human m...
In people's imagination, dying seems dreadful; however, these perceptions may not reflect reality. I...
Terror management theory research suggests that self-esteem acts as an anxiety buffer and high self-...
Terror Management Theory proposes that the threat of death produces existential terror, which accent...
According to the Terror Management Theory, the fear of death may induce anxiety and threaten individ...
A thesis submitted to the University of Bedfordshire, in partial fulfilment of the requirements for ...
People seem to have a tendency to increase the relative size of self-representational objects. Prior...
Attitudes to our own mortality are characterized by more than just fear, suggests Bob Plant
This study explores self-related outcomes (e.g., esteem, self-concept clarity, existential well-bein...
This study explores self-related outcomes (e.g., esteem, self-concept clarity, existential well-bein...
Do people lose hope when thinking about death? Based on Terror Management Theory, we predicted that ...
Do people lose hope when thinking about death? Based on Terror Management Theory, we predicted that...
The psychology underlying individuals' attempts to pursue a path of growth as a result of death cont...
Near-death experiences (NDE) are intense events that can have profound psychological consequences. A...
There are two certainties in life: we are born, and we will die. Everything in between birth and dea...
An inevitable and inconvenient truth of human existence is our eventual demise. The topic of human m...
In people's imagination, dying seems dreadful; however, these perceptions may not reflect reality. I...
Terror management theory research suggests that self-esteem acts as an anxiety buffer and high self-...
Terror Management Theory proposes that the threat of death produces existential terror, which accent...
According to the Terror Management Theory, the fear of death may induce anxiety and threaten individ...
A thesis submitted to the University of Bedfordshire, in partial fulfilment of the requirements for ...
People seem to have a tendency to increase the relative size of self-representational objects. Prior...
Attitudes to our own mortality are characterized by more than just fear, suggests Bob Plant