Results for 'existential anxiety'

973 found
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  1.  29
    Existential anxiety and religiosity.Frederic Peters - 2019 - Critical Research on Religion 7 (3):275-291.
    Analysis of the psychological processes involved in generating the sense of supernatural agency, as well as social scientific research into the factors most directly associated with the prevalence of religious belief and practice, both support a common finding: the direct correlation between levels of existential anxiety and the prevalence and intensity of religiosity. All functional elements of religion involve efforts to invoke, activate, and deploy supernatural causal agency of one sort or another. But religiosity varies throughout the world. (...)
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  2.  18
    Existential Anxiety and the Other Country.John Willcocks - 1980 - Educational Studies 6 (2):163-168.
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  3.  48
    Counterintuition, existential anxiety, and religion as a by-product of the designing mind.Deborah Kelemen - 2004 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 27 (6):739-740.
    In arguing for religion as a side effect of everyday cognition, Atran & Norenzayan (A&N) provide useful analyses of the strengths of the “naturalness-of-religion” position over others; however, experimental shortcomings limit the contributions of their empirical work. A relevant addendum involves considering research on children's orientation to teleological explanations of natural phenomena, which suggests that relatively rich cognitive proclivities might underlie religious thought.
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  4.  10
    Heidegger’s Environment and Existential Anxiety. 박인정 - 2017 - Journal of the Daedong Philosophical Association 80:21-49.
    이 논문은 하이데거의 ‘실존적 불안’에 대해 고찰하고자 한다. 불안은 자기존재를 가지고 있지 않은 존재이며 세계와의 관계 속에서 자신의 존재를 드러낼 수 있다. 따라서 세계를 고찰하지 않고 불안을 온전히 드러낼 수 없다. 본 논문은 이를 위해 먼저 인간과 세계에 대해 보편적 토대를 마련하고자 하는 전통철학의 관점을 하이데거의 입장을 따라 비판적으로 고찰하고, 세계를 각자성 속에 나타나게 하는 ‘실존적 불안’에 대해 고찰함으로써 인간본질로서의 실존적 불안의 의미를 온전히 드러내고자 한다. 전통철학에서 세계는 객관적 세계이다. 객관적 세계는 이성을 통해 바라 볼 수 있는 이론적 세계이다. 이론적 (...)
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  5.  62
    Ontological security, existential anxiety and workplace privacy.William S. Brown - 2000 - Journal of Business Ethics 23 (1):61 - 65.
    The relationship of workers to management has traditionally been one of control. However, the introduction of increasingly sophisticated technology as a means of supervision in the modern workplace has dramatically altered the contours of this relationship, giving workers much less privacy and making workers much more visible than previously possible. The purpose of this paper is to examine the current state of technological control of workers and how it has altered the relationship of worker to organization, through the impact upon (...)
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  6.  25
    Systematic Review of Existential Anxiety Instruments.V. Van Bruggen, J. Vos, G. Westerhof, E. Bohlmeijer & G. Glas - unknown
  7.  34
    Finding Freedom within Existential Anxiety with Beauvoir.Sara Hardman - 2019 - Philosophy of Education 75:578-583.
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  8. The Memorability of Supernatural Concepts: Effects of Minimal Counterintuitiveness, Moral Valence, and Existential Anxiety on Recall.James R. Beebe & Leigh Duffy - forthcoming - International Journal for the Psychology of Religion.
    Within the cognitive science of religion, some scholars hypothesize (1) that minimally counterintuitive (MCI) concepts enjoy a transmission advantage over both intuitive and highly counterintuitive concepts, (2) that religions concern counterintuitive agents, objects, or events, and (3) that the transmission advantage of MCI concepts makes them more likely to be found in the world’s religions than other kinds of concepts. We hypothesized that the memorability of many MCI supernatural concepts was due in large part to other characteristics they possess, such (...)
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  9.  9
    Phenomenology of Mystical Psychedelic Experiences: The Case of Existential Anxiety.Erik Kuravsky - 2025 - Sophia 64 (1):93-116.
    The essay offers an interpretation of psychedelic peak experiences. It criticizes the quasi-scientific naturalistic attempts to explain such experiences and offers an alternative ontology underlying a more complex sense of naturalism, thus defending an entheogenic view irreducible to mere psychological effects. First, the mainstream ontology in the paradigm of natural sciences is exposed as being a version of the ontology of presence. This fact is shown as the reason for the phenomenological gap and the impotence of the natural sciences to (...)
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  10.  21
    Anxiety, Hope and Meaning in Times of Ecological Crisis: An Existential-Phenomenological Perspective on Environmental Emotions.Petr Vaškovic & Gabriela Vičanová - 2024 - Human Studies 47 (4):771-791.
    Environmental anxiety is often thought of as a psychopathological condition. Our paper aims to challenge this narrow understanding by offering an existential-phenomenological interpretation of environmental anxiety that posits it as an _existential attunement_ with a transformative potential, capable of opening the anxious individual to a hopeful and meaningful outlook on the future. In the first part of the paper, we provide a conceptual analysis of environmental anxiety, drawing on current interdisciplinary taxonomies of environmental emotions as well (...)
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  11.  68
    An Assessment of Existential Worldview Function among Young Women at Risk for Depression and Anxiety—A Multi-Method Study.Christina Sophia Lloyd, Britt af Klinteberg & Valerie DeMarinis - 2017 - Archive for the Psychology of Religion 39 (2):165-203.
    Increasing rates of psychiatric problems like depression and anxiety among Swedish youth, predominantly among females, are considered a serious public mental health concern. Multiple studies confirm that psychological as well as existential vulnerability manifest in different ways for youths in Sweden. This multi-method study aimed at assessing existential worldview function by three factors: 1) existential worldview, 2) ontological security, and 3) self-concept, attempting to identify possible protective and risk factors for mental ill-health among female youths at (...)
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  12.  34
    (Un)Exceptional Trauma, Existential Insecurity, and Anxieties of Modern Subjecthood: A Phenomenological Analysis of Arbitrary Sovereign Violence.Sabeen Ahmed - 2019 - Puncta 2 (1):1-18.
    This article examines the lasting phenomenological consequences of inhabiting “spaces” of exception by rethinking the operation of sovereign violence therein. Taking as its point of departure Giorgio Agamben’s suggestion that the ‘state of exception’ is the ‘rule’ of modern politics, I argue that arbitrary sovereign violence has taken the place of the ‘sovereign decision’ of Carl Schmitt’s original theory. However, recognizing that it is neither enough simply to articulate the institutional grid of intelligibility of the state of exception nor expose (...)
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  13.  14
    Existential Catastrophe Anxiety”: Phenomenology of Fearful Emotions in a Subset of Service Users With Severe Mental Health Conditions.Didrik Heggdal, Synne Borgejordet & Roar Fosse - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    A subset of people with severe mental health conditions feels they are on the verge of losing control, even in the absence of external threats or triggers. Some go to extreme ends to avoid affective arousal and associated expectations of a possible, impending catastrophe. We have learned about such phenomenological, emotional challenges in a group of individuals with severe, composite mental health problems and psychosocial disabilities. These individuals have had long treatment histories in the mental health care system. They have (...)
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  14. Anxiety and Fidelity: Gabriel Marcel on Existential Fear.Jared Kemling - 2015 - Kinesis 40 (2):75-83.
    In this paper, I attempt to reorient the "problem of fear," into the question of the "mystery of anxiety": in doing so, I focus on Gabriel Marcel's text "Being and Having: An Existential Diary," where he wrestles with the questions of fear and anxiety. Once we give up on the "problem" of fear and orient ourselves along lines of Being (anxiety) rather than Having (fear), we can approach the question meaningfully: from this perspective, we begin to (...)
     
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  15. Mortality anxiety: An existential understanding for medical education and practice.N. J. Elgee - 2002 - In Daniel Liechty, Death and denial: interdisciplinary perspectives on the legacy of Ernest Becker. Westport, Conn.: Praeger. pp. 137--147.
     
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  16. World, time and anxiety. Heidegger’s existential analytic and psychiatry.Francesca Brencio - forthcoming - Folia Medica.
    Martin Heidegger has been one of the most influential but also criticized philosophers of the XX century. With Being and Time (1927) he sets apart his existential analytic from psychology as well as from anthropology and from the other human sciences that deny the ontological foundation, overcoming the Cartesian dualism in search of the ontological unit of an articulated multiplicity, as human being is. Heidegger’s Dasein Analytic defines the fundamental structures of Dasein such as being-in-the-world, a unitary structure that (...)
     
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  17.  11
    Death, anxiety, and religious belief: an existential psychology of religion.Jonathan Jong - 2016 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    The whats and whys of religious belief -- A history of thanatocentric theories of religion -- Measuring faith and fear -- Are people afraid of death? -- The religious correlates of death anxiety -- Death anxiety and religion: causes and consequences -- The future of immortality, literal, and symbolic.
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  18.  22
    When anxiety matters as a condition of possibility: about student-teachers’ anxiety experiences towards becoming a teacher.Mette Helleve & Knut Ove Æsøy - 2021 - ENCYCLOPAIDEIA 25 (60):95-106.
    The purpose of this study is to explore the emotional dimension of the student-teachers’ experiences, which is marked by anxiety. This study is based on a combination of a phenomenological informed theoretical framework and a phenomenographic approach. The empirical material refers to in-depth interviews with student-teachers. Through an abductive analysis of the material, anxiety experiences appeared to be a significant matter in the student teachers’ emotional life. Our study showed that anxiety in different variations to a large (...)
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  19.  20
    Past Life Meditation Decreases Existential Death Anxiety and Increases Meaning in Life among Individuals Who Believe in the Paranormal.Claire White & Miguel Farias - 2023 - Journal of Cognition and Culture 23 (3-4):338-356.
    Despite their growing popularity, little is known about the psychological effects of participating in past-life meditation groups in contemporary western contexts. We conducted a study to re-create some of the conditions observed in the field by facilitating a group of adults interested in exploring past life meditation. Before the session, participants completed a survey about their afterlife beliefs and associated experiences. Participants also completed questionnaires measuring meaningfulness in life and fear of death before and after the session. In the sample (...)
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  20.  19
    Dis-chronic Experience of No-thing: Existential Analysis of Freud’s and Heidegger’s Concept of Anxiety.Martina Mauri - 2020 - Eidos. A Journal for Philosophy of Culture 4 (2):52-69.
    This essay compares Freud’s and Heidegger’s concept of Angst. Heidegger’s and Freud’s interpretations are guided by different aims: A) in “Inhibition, Symptom and Anxiety” Freud tries to define the concept of anxiety as a main element in neurosis; B) Heidegger’s notion plays a major role in gaining the existential meaning of Dasein. Despite the differences, this essay claims that it is possible to discover a common anthropo-existential interpretation. Anxiety marks the anthropological and existential passage (...)
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  21.  21
    Existential injustice in phenomenological psychopathology.Daniel Vespermann & Sanna Karoliina Tirkkonen - 2025 - Philosophical Psychology 38 (1):209-245.
    In this article, we investigate how distressing background feelings can be subject to social injustice. We define background feelings as enduring feeling states that condition our perceptions of everyday situations, interpersonal dynamics, and the broader social milieu. While phenomenological psychopathology has long addressed such affective phenomena, including anxiety, guilt, and feelings of not belonging, the intersection with social injustice remains largely unexplored within the framework. To address this gap, we introduce the concept of existential injustice into phenomenological psychopathology. (...)
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  22. The Existential Threat of Climate Change.Johanna Oksala - 2023 - Environmental Philosophy 20 (2):191-214.
    The article analyzes the experience of climate anxiety. The investigation is phenomenological in the sense that I will attempt to show that contemporary climate anxiety has a distinctive structure and philosophical meaning, which make it different from both psychological anxiety and existential anxiety, as commonly understood. I will also draw out the consequences of my phenomenological analysis for climate politics. My contention is that forms of prefigurative climate politics can respond to the profound disorientation and (...)
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  23.  85
    The Anxiety of Inheritance: Reinhold Niebuhr and the Literal Truth of Original Sin.Geoffrey Rees - 2003 - Journal of Religious Ethics 31 (1):75 - 99.
    Widely regarded as the most influential proponent of the truth of original sin in the twentieth century, Reinhold Niebuhr worked hard to excise any "literalistic" element from his interpretation of the doctrine. In his attempt to "correct" the Augustinian tradition on original sin by purging it of all "literalistic errors," however, Niebuhr assumed as his starting point the most characteristically modern objection to the doctrine: that birth is a thoroughly natural, animal, and morally meaningless event. As a result, Niebuhr unnecessarily (...)
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  24.  62
    The Anxiety of Strangers and the Fear of Enemies.Steven Segal - 1998 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 17 (4):271-282.
    In this paper I use a distinction between the "anxiety of strangers" and the "fear of enemies" to show how uncertainty and tension experienced in the face of what is other and different need not lead to a nationalist insularity, but can be the occasion for an existential philosophical education - an education in which the resolute acceptance of strangeness allows us to reflect on our taken-for-granted about the everyday.
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  25. A critical approach to the problem of existential vs. psychoanalytically diagnosed anxiety: The life-struggle for the light of the spirit.B. Callieri - 1996 - Analecta Husserliana 48:261-269.
     
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  26. Kierkegaard's disruptions of literature and philosophy : freedom, anxiety, and existential contributions.Edward F. Mooney - 2018 - In Eric Ziolkowski, Kierkegaard, Literature, and the Arts. Evanston, Illinois: Northwestern University press.
     
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  27.  32
    The Anxiety-Buffering Properties of Cultural and Subcultural Worldviews: Terror Management Processes among Juvenile Delinquents.Molly Maxfield, Romuald Derbis & Lukasz Baka - 2012 - Polish Psychological Bulletin 43 (1):1-11.
    The Anxiety-Buffering Properties of Cultural and Subcultural Worldviews: Terror Management Processes among Juvenile Delinquents Terror management research indicates that people reminded of mortality strongly affirm values and standards consistent with their cultural worldview and distance themselves from values and standards inconsistent with it. However, limited research has addressed how individuals holding beliefs inconsistent with the dominant worldview cope with death-related anxiety. The present article aims to determine which worldview subcultural groups rely on when reminded of mortality: mainstream or (...)
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  28.  22
    Existential Medicine: Essays on Health and Illness.Kevin Aho (ed.) - 2018 - Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield.
    This book offers cutting edge research on the modifications and disruptions of bodily experience in the context of anxiety, depression, trauma, chronic illness, pain, and aging. It presents original contributions in applied phenomenology, biomedical ethics, and the use of medical technologies.
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  29. Eco‐Anxiety, Tragedy, and Hope: Psychological and Spiritual Dimensions of Climate Change.Panu Pihkala - 2018 - Zygon 53 (2):545-569.
    This article addresses the problem of “eco‐anxiety” by integrating results from numerous fields of inquiry. Although climate change may cause direct psychological and existential impacts, vast numbers of people already experience indirect impacts in the form of depression, socio‐ethical paralysis, and loss of well‐being. This is not always evident, because people have developed psychological and social defenses in response, including “socially constructed silence.” I argue that this situation causes the need to frame climate change narratives as emphasizing hope (...)
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  30. "Existential Responsibility in Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, and Chiang".Justin F. White - 2025 - In David Friedell, The Philosophy of Ted Chiang. Palgrave MacMillan.
    In “Story of Your Life” and “Anxiety Is the Dizziness of Freedom,” Ted Chiang explores questions that would be at home in contemporary scholarship on free will, agency, and moral responsibility. In “Story of Your Life,” Chiang asks whether knowledge of the future is compatible with free will. And the prism technology in “Anxiety Is the Dizziness of Freedom” prompts questions of whether we are responsible for out-of-character actions. If such actions were genuine anomalies, would we be less (...)
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  31. Anxiety and Boredom in the Covid-19 Crisis: A Heideggerian Analysis.James Cartlidge - 2020 - Biblioteca Della Libertà (Covid-19: A Global Challenge):22.
    Martin Heidegger gave a penetrating account of the different varieties of the moods of anxiety and boredom, which have no doubt been prevalent in the human experience of the Covid-19 pandemic. Heidegger theorized a particular type of anxiety and boredom as what I call 'revelatory moods', intense affective experiences that involve an encounter with our existence as such, our world, freedom and responsibility for the creation and proliferation of significance. Revelatory moods contain much emancipatory potential, acting as (...) catalysts for our being able to authentically seize hold of our lives and possibilities as free agents. For Heidegger, the experiences of anxiety and boredom as ones that put us into contact with the structure of our world and the stunning scope of our freedom, letting us know what we can do and are capable of. But can the same be said of these experiences as they occur in a time when our freedom has been dramatically reduced? I claim that Heidegger's theory can be productively built on, arguing that the anxiety and boredom of the pandemic puts us into contact not with the scope of our freedom, but its reduced limits. But it is the experience of encountering these limits that makes it possible for us to begin to work out how to live in spite of them, forging new modes of solidarity and its enactment. Living authentically in this new situation in spite of our reduced freedom must take place on a prior disclosure of the limits of this freedom. Heidegger locates the possibility of such a disclosure in revelatory anxiety and boredom. (shrink)
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  32.  4
    Anxiety as Theme of an Alternative History of Philosophy: A Glimpse into the Monograph Anxiety: A Philosophical History.Bettina Bergo - 2024 - Symposium 28 (2):156-180.
    This article offers an overview of my 2020 study, Anxiety: A Philo-sophical History. I discuss the philosophers and theorists examined, and show how anxiety, understood in German as Angst (it has but one term for this affect), moved through Idealism from a largely noxious state (Kant) into the role of an emotion-adjuvant of reason (Hegel), into the sign of imminent birth—of nature (Schelling). I focus on the existential turn given anxiety, as a “state” prior to freedom (...)
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  33.  17
    Waking to Wonder: Wittgenstein's Existential Investigations.Gordon C. F. Bearn - 1997 - State University of New York Press.
    The central claim of this book is that, early and late, Wittgenstein modelled his approach to existential meaning on his account of linguistic meaning. A reading of Nietzsche’s The Birth of Tragedy sets up Bearn’s reading of the existential point of Wittgenstein’s Tractatus. Bearn argues that both books try to resolve our anxiety about the meaning of life by appeal to the deep, unutterable essence of the world. Bearn argues that as Wittgenstein’s and Nietzsche’s thought matured, they (...)
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  34. Anxiety: A Philosophical History.Bettina Bergo - 2020 - New York, NY, United States of America: Oxford University Press.
    "This is a study of the unlikely 'career' of anxiety in 19th and 20th century philosophy, above all. Anxiety is an affect, something more subtle, sometimes more persistent, than an emotion or a passion. It lies at the intersectiona of embodiment and cognition, sensation and emotion. But anxiety also runs like a red thread through European thought beginning from receptions of Kant's transcendental project. Like a symptom of the quest to situate and give life to the philosophical (...)
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  35.  11
    Overcoming Anxiety and Despair for a Flourishing Life: Centered on S. Kierkegaard and E. Phelps. 황종환 - 2024 - Journal of the Society of Philosophical Studies 69:127-151.
    ‘나’ 즉 자아(自我)는 나와 너에게 주어진 최고의 선물이다. 펠프스(E. Phelps)에서 자아의 형성은 경제적 번영의 출발이다. 그는 각 개인이 미지(未知)의 새로운 차원으로 나아가는 모험적 시도를 키에르케고어의 실존 사상에서 찾는다. 키에르케고어는 실존적 불안과 절망을 넘어 현실의 구체적 변화를 추구했다. 불안과 절망을 극복하면서 각 개인의 가능성은 마침내 삶의 현실이 되고 역사(歷史)를 창조한다.각 개인이 더 깊은 실존적 성숙으로 나아가며 체험되는 자아는 경제적 영역뿐만 아니라 문화의 각 분야에서 표현된다. 각 개인이 자아의 가능성을 현실로 표현하지 못하면 개인이나 국가는 쇠락(衰落)할 수밖에 없다. 전체주의나 집단주의에서 각 개인의 개성과 (...)
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  36.  14
    Existential and Spiritual Issues in Death Attitudes.Adrian Tomer, Grafton Eliason & Paul T. P. Wong (eds.) - 2007 - Psychology Press.
    _Existential and Spiritual Issues in Death Attitudes_ provides: an in-depth examination of death attitudes, existentialism, and spirituality and their relationships; a review of the major theoretical models; clinical applications of these models to issues such as infertility, bereavement, anxiety, and suicide; and an introduction to meaning management theory and how it can be applied to grief counseling. In this new volume, death is treated both as a threat to meaning and as an opportunity to create meaning. The first section (...)
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  37. Finding Meaning Amidst COVID-19: An Existential Positive Psychology Model of Suffering.Daryl R. Van Tongeren & Sara A. Showalter Van Tongeren - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    The global COVID-19 pandemic has created a crisis of suffering. We conceptualize suffering as a deeply existential issue that fundamentally changes people indelible ways and for which there are no easy solutions. To better understand its effects and how people can flourish in the midst of this crisis, we formally introduce and elaborate on an Existential Positive Psychology Model of Suffering (EPPMS) and apply that to the COVID-19 global pandemic. Our model has three core propositions: (a) suffering reveals (...)
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  38.  18
    Not all dogs (and goals) were created equal: an existential perspective on helplessness.Mario Mikulincer & Uri Lifshin - 2022 - Cognition and Emotion 36 (6):1049-1053.
    Building on the framework of learned helplessness, and applying a behavioural perspective, Boddez et al. theorise that consecutive failures in various life domains might be generalised and cause a general sense of helplessness, which leads to, and can be conceptualised as, human suffering. We argue that this perspective fails to address the complexities of human suffering and the motivational sources of feelings of helplessness. We provide an existential-social psychological perspective on helplessness, highlighting the need for psychological protection and the (...)
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  39.  11
    Cultural-Existential Psychology: The Role of Culture in Suffering and Threat.Daniel Sullivan - 2016 - Cambridge University Press.
    Cultural psychology and experimental existential psychology are two of the fastest-growing movements in social psychology. In this book, Daniel Sullivan combines both perspectives to present a groundbreaking analysis of culture's role in shaping the psychology of threat experience. The first part of the book presents a new theoretical framework guided by three central principles: that humans are in a unique existential situation because we possess symbolic consciousness and culture; that culture provides psychological protection against threatening experiences, but also (...)
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  40.  74
    Existential Hope and Existential Despair in Ai Apocalypticism and Transhumanism.Beth Singler - 2019 - Zygon 54 (1):156-176.
    Drawing on observations from on‐ and offline fieldwork among transhumanists and artificial superintelligence/singularity‐focused groups, this article will explore an anthropology of anxiety around the hoped for, or feared, posthuman future. It will lay out some of the varieties of existential hope and existential despair found in these discussions about predicted events such as the “end of the world” and place them within an anthropological theoretical framework. Two examples will be considered. First, the optimism observed at a transhumanist (...)
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  41.  19
    Existential and Psychological Problems of Aging: The Perspective of Ukrainian Lyrics’ Art Representation.О. V. Shaf & N. P. Oliynyk - 2021 - Anthropological Measurements of Philosophical Research 20:39-51.
    Purpose. Aging is intricate process of self-transformation in view of involution of body, loss of sexual attractiveness, but at the same time, old age is a time for reconsideration of self-existence in time and in the world within coherence of life sense targets and their realization. Unique individual experience of growing old implemented in Ukrainian literature can complete the data received by gerontology. Moreover gender approach in literary gerontology highlights masculine / feminine phenotypical features of internal reverberating of aging. Theoretical (...)
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  42.  12
    Existential and psychological problems connected with Threat Predicting Process.Piotr Mamcarz - 2014 - Journal for Perspectives of Economic Political and Social Integration 20 (1-2):53-69.
    The aim of the article is to present a very important phenomenon affecting human integrity and homeostasis that is Threat Prediction Process. This process can be defined as “experiencing apprehension concerning results of potential/ actual dangers,” oscillating in terminological area of anxiety, fear, stress, restlessness. Moreover, it highlights a cognitive process distinctive for listed phenomenon’s. The process accompanied with technological and organization changes increases number of health problems affecting many populations. Hard work conditions; changing life style; or many social (...)
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  43.  91
    Anxiety and the face of the other: Tillich and Levinas on the origin of questioning.Nathan Eric Dickman - 2009 - Sophia 48 (3):267-279.
    With almost a century of historical distance between Heidegger’s retrieval of the question of being and contemporary concern about the Other, we have accrued invaluable experiences for critical leverage about what it is to ask one another questions. I offer a sketch aimed at adapting Tillich’s theological system grounded in existential questioning to today by juxtaposing him with Levinas’ philosophical ethics. Tillich and Levinas provide motive for reflection on the topic of questioning in particular. In the case of Tillich, (...)
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  44.  52
    The Contribution of Existential Phenomenology in the Recovery-Oriented Care of Patients with Severe Mental Disorders.Philippe Huguelet - 2014 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 39 (4):346-367.
    Promoting recovery has become more and more important in the care of patients with severe mental disorders such as psychosis. Recovery is a personal process of growth involving hope, self-identity, meaning in life, and responsibility. Obviously, these components pertain, at least in part, to a psychotherapeutic care perspective. Yet, up to now, recovery has mainly been taken into account in transforming health services and as a general framework for supportive therapy. Existential phenomenology abdicates a theoretical stance and considers issues (...)
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  45.  33
    Ethical and existential challenges associated with a cancer diagnosis.J. Pascal & R. Endacott - 2010 - Journal of Medical Ethics 36 (5):279-283.
    Background At the point of cancer diagnosis, practitioners may wrestle with ethical dilemmas associated with medico-legal implications of diagnosis, treatment options and disclosure to family members. The patient's perspective can take a different route, focusing on ethical and existential questions about the value and purpose of life, culminating in the question: how do I lead my life after diagnosis? Objective To explore the ethical and existential challenges associated with a cancer diagnosis from the perspective of cancer survivors. Design (...)
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  46.  47
    The ‘nothing’ in Heidegger’s concept of anxiety: from groundlessness to presence.Maria Balaska - 2023 - Philosophical Psychology 36 (8):1543-1558.
    In this paper I explore the differences between how Martin Heidegger and Wouter Kusters understand the role that anxiety as an encounter with the nothing plays for the origin of philosophy. Despite an important overlap between Heidegger and Kusters on the critical distance they take from the discourse of psychology and psychiatry and their valuable attempt to de-psychologize the discourse around anxiety and prioritize its existential insights, I argue that Kusters’ view of the nothing primarily as groundlessness (...)
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    Addressing the existential dimension in treatment settings: Mental health professionals’ and healthcare chaplains’ attitudes, practices, understanding and perceptions of value.Hilde Frøkedal, Torgeir Sørensen, Torleif Ruud, Valerie DeMarinis & Hans Stifoss-Hanssen - 2019 - Archive for the Psychology of Religion 41 (3):253-276.
    Research has shown that addressing and integrating the existential dimension in treatment settings reduce symptoms like anxiety, depression and substance abuse. Healthcare chaplains are key personnel in this practice. A nationwide, cross-sectional survey influenced by a mixed-methods approach was used to examine the attitudes, practices, understanding and perceptions of mental health professionals, including healthcare chaplains, regarding the value of addressing the existential dimension in treatment programmes. The existential group practice was led by the healthcare chaplains as (...)
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    Heidegger's Anxiety: On the Role of Mood in Phenomenological Method.R. Matthew Shockey - 2016 - Bulletin D’Analyse Phénoménologique, 12 (1).
    Heidegger’s early project aims to articulate the form of our being as Dasein, and he says that for this usually hidden form to become accessible, a certain kind of “mood” is required of the philosopher. This “ground-mood” he identifies in Sein und Zeit as anxiety. He also, however, presents anxiety as a mood anyone, philosopher or not, experiences when there is some significant breakdown in the living of her life. I argue here that there are largely unrecognized problems (...)
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  49.  10
    Hermeneutics and negativism: existential ambiguities of self-understanding.Arne Grøen, Claudia Welz & René Rosfort (eds.) - 2018 - Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck.
    Claudia Welz and René Rosfort: Introduction: A Negativistic Approach to Existential Hermeneutics Stefano Micali: Anxiety between Dialectics and Phenomenology René Rosfort: Kierkegaard and the Problem of Ethics Mads Peter Karlsen: The Past >Has Us Before We Have.
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  50.  47
    The Emotion of Self-Reflexive Anxiety.Ruth Rebecca Tietjen - 2020 - Journal of the American Philosophical Association 6 (3):297-315.
    In this article, I provide an analysis of the widespread, intellectually fascinating, and existentially challenging phenomenon of self-reflexive anxiety in which we feel threatened by what or who we are (or have been or will become). I focus on those cases in which we take an event or action whose possible occurrence we attribute to ourselves to be expressive or constitutive of our identity. As I argue, depending on the kind of event we are dealing with, our descriptive self-conception, (...)
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