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  1. Mar 10, 2023 · Nonbeing threats trigger the existential anxiety of stranded travelers related to death, isolation, and meaninglessness. Second, our results reveal the post-traumatic growth of stranded travelers in the five domains of meaning seeking, life philosophy reconstruction, identity, prosocial behavior, and awe of nature.

  2. A number of philosophical and psychological theories suggest the true self is an important contributor to well-being. The present research examined whether the cognitive accessibility of the true self-concept would predict the experience of meaning in life. To ensure that any observed effects were due to the true self-concept rather than the ...

  3. Jan 3, 2024 · Existential intelligence is sometimes called spiritual intelligence since it relates to questions about existence, life, death, and the beyond. EI is one type of intelligence in the Multiple Intelligences theory. The Multiple Intelligences (MI) theory describes 9 types of intelligence that sum up humans' natural inclinations for learning and ...

  4. Nov 21, 2023 · Resistance in therapy is the unwillingness of a client to grow or change within therapy. There are various ways in which a client may resist therapy, which include: Minimal talking or silence ...

  5. Nov 1, 2023 · Many existential therapists, although not all, seem to explicate existential topics and offer didactical psycho-education regarding these existential topics, such as freedom, choice, responsibility, meaning in life, being-in-the-world, mortality, existential anxiety and uncertainty of being (Vos, 2017, Vos et al., 2015a). The explicit exploring ...

  6. Dec 4, 2018 · The humanistic perspective serves as an alternative to mechanistic and/or reductionistic explanations of personality based on isolated, static elements of observable behavior (e.g., quantifiable traits) or self-concept. Humanistic psychologists contend that personality formation is an ongoing process motivated by the need for relative ...

  7. Jul 22, 2021 · The group read through the data with empathic engagement, broke the data into the smallest possible units of meaning, organized these meaning units into existential categories (as noted above, e.g., lived experience of body, others, time, etc.), and identified general structural themes that emerged across participants.