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Forgiveness: Theory, research, and practice.
Michael E. McCullough,Kenneth I. Pargament,Carl E. Thoresen +2 more
- 01 Jan 2000
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TL;DR: Forgiveness and health: An Unanswered Question, Carl E. Thoresen, Alex H. Harris, and Frederic Luskin this paper The Frontier of Forgiveness: Seven Directions for Psychological Study and Practice.
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Abstract: 1. The Psychology of Forgiveness: History, Conceptual Issues, and Overview, Michael E. McCullough, Kenneth I. Pargament, and Carl E. Thoresen I. Conceptual and Measurement Issues 2.Religious Perspectives on Forgiveness, Mark S. Rye, Kenneth I. Pargament, M. Amir Ali, Guy L. Beck, Elliot N. Dorff, Charles Hallisey, Vasudha Narayanan, and James G. Williams 3.The Meaning of Forgiveness in a Specific Situational and Cultural Context: Persons Living with HIV/AIDS in India, Lydia R. Temoshok and Prabha S. Chandra 4. What We Know (and Need to Know) about Assessing Forgiveness Constructs, Michael E. McCullough, K. Chris Rachal, and William T. Hoyt II. Basic Psychological Research 5. The Neuropsychological Correlates of Forgiveness, Andrew B. Newberg, Eugene G. d'Aquili, Stephanie K. Newberg, and Verushka deMarici 6. Developmental and Cognitive Points of View on Forgiveness, Etienne Mullet and Michele Girard 7. Expressing Forgiveness and Repentance: Benefits and Barriers, Julie Juola Exline and Roy F. Baumeister 8. Personality and Forgiveness, Robert A. Emmons III. Applications in Counseling, Psychotherapy, and Health 9. Forgiveness as a Process of Change in Individual Psychotherapy, Wanda M. Malcolm and Leslie S. Greenberg 10. The Use of Forgiveness in Marital Therapy, Kristina Coop Gordon, Donald H. Baucom, and Douglas K. Snyder 11. Group Interventions to Promote Forgiveness: What Researchers and Clinicians Ought to Know, Everett L. Worthington, Jr., Steven J. Sandage, and Jack W. Berry 12. Forgiveness and Health: An Unanswered Question, Carl E. Thoresen, Alex H. S. Harris, and Frederic Luskin 13. Forgiveness in Pastoral Care and Counseling, John Patton IV. Conclusion 14. The Frontier of Forgiveness: Seven Directions for Psychological Study and Practice, Kenneth I. Pargament, Michael E. McCullough, and Carl E. Thoresen
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Citations
Subjective Well-Being of Hong Kong Chinese Teachers: The Contribution of Gratitude, Forgiveness, and the Orientations to Happiness.
TL;DR: This paper investigated whether gratitude and forgiveness contribute to subjective well-being (life satisfaction, positive affect, and negative affect) above the contribution of the three orientations to happiness in a sample of 143 Hong Kong Chinese teachers.
174
Religious involvement and the forgiving personality.
Etienne Mullet,José Barros,Loredana Frongia Veronica Usaï,Félix Neto,Sheila Rivière Shafighi +4 more
TL;DR: It was found that what made the difference in the willingness to forgive was mainly the social commitment to religion (attendance in church and the taking of vows), not mere personal beliefs.
169
Dimensions of forgiveness: The views of laypersons:
TL;DR: For example, this article investigated lay definitions of forgiveness, as well as reasons for forgiving and non-forgiveness in the context of interpersonal offenses. But their focus was on interpersonal offenses, and not on personal relationships.
167
Forgiveness, Reconciliation, and Shame: Three Key Variables in Reducing School Bullying
Eliza Ahmed,Valerie Braithwaite +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the relationship between forgiveness, reconciliation, shame and school bullying and found that both forgiveness and reconciliation directly predicted less bullying and indirect pathways showed that reconciliation reduced bullying via adaptive shame management.
Forgiveness and Its Associations With Prosocial Thinking, Feeling, and Doing Beyond the Relationship With the Offender:
TL;DR: The authors found that unforgiveness reduces tendencies toward generalized prosocial orientation, whereas forgiveness restores generalized prossocial orientation to baseline levels within the relationship.