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The Psychology of Meaning
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Table of Contents

Contributors

  • Introduction: The New Science of Meaning 
    Travis Proulx, Keith D. Markman, and Matthew J. Lindberg
  • I. The Architecture of Meaning

  • Three Forms of Meaning and the Management of Complexity 
    Jordan B. Peterson
  • An Edifice for Enduring Personal Value: A Terror Management Perspective on the Human Quest for Multilevel Meaning 
    Jamie Arndt, Mark J. Landau, Kenneth E. Vail III, and Matthew Vess
  • Beyond Mortality and the Self: Meaning Makes a Comeback 
    Travis Proulx
  • II. Epistemic Understanding

  • Truth Motivation 
    E. Tory Higgins
  • Lay Theories of Personality as Cornerstones of Meaning 
    Caitlin M. Burton and Jason E. Plaks
  • Making Meaning by Seeing Human 
    Adam Waytz
  • III. Teleological Understanding: A Guide for Living

  • Autobiographical Memory and the Creation of Meaning From Personally Experienced Events 
    W. Richard Walker and John J. Skowronski
  • How Actors, Agents, and Authors Find Meaning in Life 
    Dan P. McAdams
  • Meaning and Morality: A Natural Coupling 
    Ronnie Janoff-Bulman
  • Wrestling With Our Better Selves: The Search for Meaning in Life 
    Michael F. Steger
  • IV. Teleological Understanding: Explanations for Events

  • Searching for and Finding Meaning Following Personal and Collective Traumas 
    Roxane Cohen Silver and John A. Updegraff
  • Spirituality and Meaning Making in Cancer Survivorship 
    Crystal L. Park
  • Finding Silver Linings: Meaning Making as a Compensatory Response to Negative Experiences 
    Joanna E. Anderson, Aaron C. Kay, and Gráinne M. Fitzsimons
  • Finding Meaning in One's Past: Nostalgia as an Existential Resource 
    Clay Routledge, Constantine Sedikides, Tim Wildschut, and Jacob Juhl
  • Twists of Fate: Moments in Time and What Might Have Been in the Emergence of Meaning 
    Laura J. Kray, Hal E. Hershfield, Linda G. George, and Adam D. Galinsky
  • "It Was Meant to Be": Retrospective Meaning Construction Through Mental Simulation 
    Matthew J. Lindberg, Keith D. Markman, and Hyeman Choi
  • V. Restoring Meaning

  • Meaning Making Following Activation of the Behavioral Inhibition System: How Caring Less About What Others Think May Help Us to Make Sense of What Is Going on 
    Kees van den Bos
  • The Embodiment of Meaning Violations 
    Sarah S. M. Townsend, Dina Eliezer, and Brenda Major
  • Neural and Motivational Mechanics of Meaning and Threat 
    Alexa M. Tullett, Mike S. Prentice, Rimma Teper, Kyle A. Nash, Michael Inzlicht, and Ian McGregor
  • Still a Thrill: Meaning Making and the Pleasures of Uncertainty 
    Timothy D. Wilson, Dieynaba G. Ndiaye, Cheryl Hahn, and Daniel T. Gilbert
  • What Makes Life Meaningful: Positive Mood Works in a Pinch 
    Marc Halusic and Laura A. King
  • Psychotherapy and the Restoration of Meaning: Existential Philosophy in Clinical Practice 
    Peter Zafirides, Keith D. Markman, Travis Proulx, and Matthew J. Lindberg
  • Index

    About the Editors

    About the Author

    Keith D. Markman, PhD, is an associate professor of psychology at Ohio University, where he is a member of the social judgment and behavioral decision-making program.
     
    Dr. Markman received his doctorate in 1994 at Indiana University and completed a 3-year postdoctoral fellowship at The Ohio State University. He conducts research in the areas of counterfactual thinking, creativity, and psychological momentum and has published over 40 articles and book chapters in these areas.
     
    Dr. Markman is currently an associate editor of Social and Personality Psychology Compass, was nominated for the 2003 Theoretical Innovation Prize in social and personality psychology, and won the Outstanding Junior Faculty Award at Ohio University in 2004. His edited volume, The Handbook of Imagination and Mental Simulation, was published in 2009.
     
    Travis Proulx, PhD, is an assistant professor in the Department of Social Psychology at Tilburg University's School of Social and Behavioral Sciences in Tilburg, Netherlands.
     
    Dr. Proulx received a master's degree in interdisciplinary studies at the University of British Columbia and went on to receive a doctorate in developmental psychology. He subsequently completed a postdoctoral fellowship in social psychology at the University of California, Santa Barbara.
     
    Drawing from these diverse perspectives, Dr. Proulx has worked in collaboration on the meaning maintenance model — a discipline-spanning framework that offers an integrated account of inconsistency compensation phenomena. His research focuses on the common ways that people respond to a wide array of meaning violations, ranging from absurdist humor to the absurdity of human mortality.
     
    Matthew J. Lindberg, PhD, is a visiting researcher in the Department of Psychological Sciences at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio.
     
    Dr. Lindberg received his doctorate in 2010 at Ohio University and subsequently joined the Department of Psychology at Fayetteville State University as an assistant professor. His research focuses on how people think about the world and people around them, and how such thoughts affect their emotions, motivations, and behaviors.
     
    Dr. Lindberg has conducted research on counterfactual thinking, creativity, meaning, conscious and unconscious thinking, and jury decision-making.
     

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