Content area
Full text
Contents
- Abstract
- Meaning in Life as a Subjective Judgment
- Meaning in Life as Coherence, Purpose, and Mattering
- Coherence, Purpose, and Mattering as Potential Bases of MIL Judgments
- Measuring Sense of Coherence, Purpose, and Mattering
- Overview of the Present Studies
- Study 1
- Method
- Participants and procedure
- Measures
- MIL judgments
- Sense of coherence
- Sense of purpose
- Sense of mattering
- Sense of control
- Sense of belonging
- Self-esteem and self-competence
- Mood
- Results
- Analytical approach
- Item selection and construct validation
- Structural equation model
- Discussion
- Study 2
- Method
- Participants and procedure
- Measures
- Results
- Measurement invariance
- Cross-lagged longitudinal model
- Discussion
- Study 3
- Method
- Participants and procedure
- Measures
- Results
- Measurement invariance across time
- Cross-lagged longitudinal model
- Moderators
- Native language
- Religious belief
- Lower and higher MIL
- Demographic characteristics and political orientation
- Discussion
- General Discussion
- Meaning Is About Mattering
- Future Directions
- Implications
- Conclusion
- Appendix A
- Appendix B
Figures and Tables
Abstract
When people judge their lives as meaningful, what is this judgment about? Drawing on recent tripartite theoretical accounts of meaning in life (MIL), we tested the separate contributions of coherence (or comprehension), purpose, and existential mattering (or significance) as potential precursors of people’s self-reported evaluations of MIL. In Study 1 (N = 314 social media users), we developed brief acquiescence-free measures of these constructs, confirming that sense of coherence, purpose, mattering, and MIL judgments were distinct from each other and from related constructs (sense of control, belonging, self-esteem, self-competence, mood). In Study 2 (N = 168 students) and Study 3 (N = 442 Prolific Academic respondents; preregistered), we collected longitudinal data to test temporal relationships between coherence, purpose, mattering, and MIL judgments over a 1-month time lag. In both studies, sense of mattering consistently emerged as a significant precursor of MIL judgments, whereas sense of purpose and coherence did not. We conclude that researchers and practitioners should pay more attention to the relatively neglected dimension of existential mattering, beyond their more common emphases on coherence or purpose as bases of meaningfulness.
Experiencing one’s life as meaningful is associated with measurable benefits. Self-reported meaning in life (MIL) has been linked to healthier eating,...





