Pyszczynski Tom, Greenberg Jeff, Solomon Sheldon, Arndt Jamie, Schimel Jeff
Department of Psychology, University of Colorado at Colorado Springs, Colorado Springs, CO, USA.
Psychol Bull. 2004 May;130(3):435-68. doi: 10.1037/0033-2909.130.3.435.
Terror management theory (TMT; J. Greenberg, T. Pyszczynski, & S. Solomon, 1986) posits that people are motivated to pursue positive self-evaluations because self-esteem provides a buffer against the omnipresent potential for anxiety engendered by the uniquely human awareness of mortality. Empirical evidence relevant to the theory is reviewed showing that high levels of self-esteem reduce anxiety and anxiety-related defensive behavior, reminders of one's mortality increase self-esteem striving and defense of self-esteem against threats in a variety of domains, high levels of self-esteem eliminate the effect of reminders of mortality on both self-esteem striving and the accessibility of death-related thoughts, and convincing people of the existence of an afterlife eliminates the effect of mortality salience on self-esteem striving. TMT is compared with other explanations for why people need self-esteem, and a critique of the most prominent of these, sociometer theory, is provided.
恐惧管理理论(TMT;J. 格林伯格、T. 皮兹钦斯基和S. 所罗门,1986)认为,人们有动力去追求积极的自我评价,因为自尊为抵御由人类对死亡的独特认知所引发的普遍焦虑提供了缓冲。本文回顾了与该理论相关的实证证据,表明高自尊水平可降低焦虑及与焦虑相关的防御行为,对死亡的提醒会增加自尊追求以及在各个领域针对自尊威胁的防御,高自尊水平可消除对死亡的提醒对自尊追求和与死亡相关想法可及性的影响,并且让人们相信来世的存在可消除死亡凸显对自尊追求的影响。将恐惧管理理论与关于人们为何需要自尊的其他解释进行了比较,并对其中最突出的社会计量理论进行了批判。