[jounal] Baumeister, R. S. / 1995 / The need to belong: Desire for interpersonal attachments as
a fundamental human motivation / Psychological Bulletin 117: 497 ~ 529
The need to belong: desire for interpersonal attachments as
a fundamental human motivation.
Baumeister and Leary (1995) highlighted the benefits of forming and maintaining social bonds in terms of survival and reproduction, proposing that the need for interpersonal attachments constitutes
a fundamental human motivation.
The need to belong: Desire for interpersonal attachments as
a fundamental human motivation.
Psychologists agree on
a fundamental human motivation such as the need to belong, which is our emotional need to be accepted by members of a group affecting our behavior.
Not exact matches
If the
fundamental human religious
motivation is the desire to be in harmony with ultimate reality, with whatever is deemed divine, and if being in harmony with the divine means to imitate it, the divine that is imitated is a Cosmic Macho Male.
The most
fundamental theoretical explanations for the importance of leaders» direction - setting practices are goal - based theories of
human motivation (e.g., Bandura, 1986; Ford, 1992; Locke, Latham and Eraz, 1988).
Fundamental to his work is a
motivation to observe and document the
human existence and the ways in which historical and contemporary social policy have influenced and marked both individuals and communities.