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When death thoughts lead to death fears: mortality salience increases death anxiety for individuals who lack meaning in life

When death thoughts lead to death fears: mortality salience increases death anxiety for individuals who lack meaning in life
When death thoughts lead to death fears: mortality salience increases death anxiety for individuals who lack meaning in life
Research derived from terror management theory demonstrates that subtle reminders of mortality increase strivings for meaning. It is argued that such strivings reflect efforts to prevent the anxiety that death reminders may otherwise cause. However, no research has directly tested the assertions that subtle mortality primes increase death anxiety and perceptions of meaning in life moderate this effect. The current study examined these predictions. Meaning in life was measured, death cognition primed, and death anxiety assessed. A mortality prime increased death anxiety, but only for individuals who lack perceptions of meaning in life. Theoretical and applied implications are discussed.
mortality salience, death anxiety, meaning, well-being
0269-9931
848-854
Routledge, Clay
c1e0088a-3cc4-4d54-bbd3-de7d286429d8
Juhl, Jacob
1c3b38b1-ba9e-4f3c-8520-ebca3b712fa2
Routledge, Clay
c1e0088a-3cc4-4d54-bbd3-de7d286429d8
Juhl, Jacob
1c3b38b1-ba9e-4f3c-8520-ebca3b712fa2

Routledge, Clay and Juhl, Jacob (2010) When death thoughts lead to death fears: mortality salience increases death anxiety for individuals who lack meaning in life. Cognition and Emotion, 24 (5), 848-854. (doi:10.1080/02699930902847144).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Research derived from terror management theory demonstrates that subtle reminders of mortality increase strivings for meaning. It is argued that such strivings reflect efforts to prevent the anxiety that death reminders may otherwise cause. However, no research has directly tested the assertions that subtle mortality primes increase death anxiety and perceptions of meaning in life moderate this effect. The current study examined these predictions. Meaning in life was measured, death cognition primed, and death anxiety assessed. A mortality prime increased death anxiety, but only for individuals who lack perceptions of meaning in life. Theoretical and applied implications are discussed.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 18 May 2009
Published date: 2010
Keywords: mortality salience, death anxiety, meaning, well-being
Organisations: Psychology

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 348124
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/348124
ISSN: 0269-9931
PURE UUID: 787c8b56-2873-4d1a-8d8f-de13621344fd

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Date deposited: 06 Feb 2013 12:35
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 12:55

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Contributors

Author: Clay Routledge
Author: Jacob Juhl

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