The need for absolute truth and self-rumination as basic suppressors in the relationship between private self-consciousness and mental health
Citation
Şimşek, Ö. F., Ceylandağ, A. E., Akcan, G. (2013). The need for absolute truth and self-rumination as basic suppressors in the relationship between private self-consciousness and mental health. Journal of General Psychology. 140.4, 294-310.Abstract
Self-reflection has not so far been shown to have any specific benefits for mental health except for self-knowledge. Recent research showed that the controversy concerning the relationship between self-reflection and mental health could completely be eliminated if self-rumination and the need for absolute truth, especially the need for absolute truth, were considered as suppressor variables. This research replicated these findings in a different sample and expanded these findings by showing that the same is true for private self-consciousness. The need for absolute truth as a new variable was shown to be highly important in understanding the effects of self-consciousness on mental health.