Abstract

PurposeIn the present study, we aimed to integrate unidimensional and multidimensional perspectives of the construct of the fear of personal death (FOPD). It has been assumed that (a) there is one general factor of FOPD, reflecting the unidimensional perspective and that (b) FOPD assumes a hierarchical structure reflecting the multidimensional perspective.MethodsWe administered the Death and Dying Anxiety Inventory (FVTS, Ochsmann, 1993) to 1217 Polish participants (602 women and 615 men) aged between 18 and 89 (MAge = 31.13; SDAge = 12.65).ResultsThe results of the bi-factor model of the confirmatory factor analysis proved the existence of a FOPD general factor. Using the bass-ackwards approach, we provided evidence on the hierarchical structure of FOPD, which stresses that specific types of FOPD distinguished in the FVTS, which, on a higher level, make up the factors of threats to self-fulfilling existence, threats to well-being and threats of physical destruction, which in turn depend on the subject’s perspective: the physical self and/or the symbolic self.ConclusionThe current study demonstrates that unidimensional and multidimensional approaches to FOPD do not necessarily exclude one another. The unidimensional approach to FOPD seems to be most appropriate for studying the intensity of FOPD, while the multidimensional approach seems to be more suitable for studying the individual differences in how people give meaning to FOPD.

Highlights

  • ObjectivesWe aimed to integrate unidimensional and multidimensional perspectives of the construct of the fear of personal death (FOPD)

  • Using bi-Confirmatory factorial analysis (CFA), we demonstrated the existence of a general fear of personal death (FOPD) factor, which was significantly saturated with the types of fear of death distinguished in the Furcht vor tod und sterben (FVTS)

  • While the measurement of the general factor makes it possible to study the level and psychological consequences of the FOPD in everyday human functioning (e.g. research based on the terror management theory (TMT); Solomon et al, 2015), focus on the diversity of meanings and forms of the FOPD is necessary for a complete understanding of the complexity of its structure (Kastenbaum, 2000)

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Summary

Objectives

We aimed to integrate unidimensional and multidimensional perspectives of the construct of the fear of personal death (FOPD). Present study As there are discrepancies in the literature on the meaning and structure of the FOPD, the aim of the present study was to examine it in a more nuanced way, with the Furcht vor Tod und Sterben Fragebogen (Death and Dying Anxiety Inventory, FVTS) as an empirical illustration

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