2017
DOI: 10.1080/15298868.2016.1269669
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The true self and existential structure? Unexpected effects of mortality salience and personal need for structure on belief in a true self

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Cited by 7 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…From an empirical perspective, studies have found that acting in accordance with core aspects of the self relate to increased meaning in life (e.g., Christy et al, 2019; Dulaney et al, 2019; McGregor & Little, 1998; Schlegel et al, 2012). Other research has found that activating thoughts about and the feeling of knowing one’s “true self,” or who one really is, lead to the subjective experience of meaning in life, as does a sense of clarity in one’s self-concept (Bigler et al, 2001; Christy et al, 2017; Ritchie et al, 2011; Schlegel et al, 2009, 2011, 2012; Shin et al, 2016). Still another line of work on self-projection, or the process of “mentally transcending the ‘here-and-now’ to occupy psychologically a different time (past or future), a different place, a different person’s subjective experience, or a hypothetical reality,” has been found to lead to feelings of meaning in life (Waytz et al, 2015, p. 336).…”
Section: The Self-concept and Meaning In Lifementioning
confidence: 99%
“…From an empirical perspective, studies have found that acting in accordance with core aspects of the self relate to increased meaning in life (e.g., Christy et al, 2019; Dulaney et al, 2019; McGregor & Little, 1998; Schlegel et al, 2012). Other research has found that activating thoughts about and the feeling of knowing one’s “true self,” or who one really is, lead to the subjective experience of meaning in life, as does a sense of clarity in one’s self-concept (Bigler et al, 2001; Christy et al, 2017; Ritchie et al, 2011; Schlegel et al, 2009, 2011, 2012; Shin et al, 2016). Still another line of work on self-projection, or the process of “mentally transcending the ‘here-and-now’ to occupy psychologically a different time (past or future), a different place, a different person’s subjective experience, or a hypothetical reality,” has been found to lead to feelings of meaning in life (Waytz et al, 2015, p. 336).…”
Section: The Self-concept and Meaning In Lifementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Participants reliably rate targets who change for the better as expressing their true selves more than targets who change for the worse (Bench et al, 2015; Newman et al, 2014), and this bias is observed cross-culturally and even among misanthropes (i.e., people who explicitly endorse beliefs that people are generally bad; De Freitas et al, 2018). Simply observing incidental information (e.g., facial features) about a person’s moral goodness, relative to their moral badness, can lead people to feel that they know that person’s true self better (Christy et al, 2017).…”
Section: Lay Reasoning About True Selvesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Four attention check items were embedded throughout the study (one in the first part of the study and three in the second part). As in Study 6, participants failing two or more of 8 Although the SEB and BTS scales were our primary dependent measures in this study, we also included an exploratory essay-based measure (first used by Christy, Sanders, Vess, Routledge, & Schlegel, 2017) in which participants read an essay expressing disbelief in true selves and reported their attitudes towards the essay's author. Given the dissimilarity between the essay measure and the other dependent measures, we opted not to include results for the essay measure in this report.…”
Section: Manipulation Of Essentialist Beliefs About Gendermentioning
confidence: 99%