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Personal spiritual values and quality of life: Evidence from Chinese college students

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posted on 2024-01-08, 10:42 authored by Kaili Zhang
<p>Values are guiding principles in our life. While some studies found spiritual values to be “healthier”, Sagiv and Schwartz (2000) showed that people holding non-spiritual values were higher on affective well-being. We examined the predictive power of these two types of values with a longitudinal dataset collected from Chinese students in Hong Kong. Structural equation modeling revealed that spiritual values (as well as family income) positively predicted quality of life a year later. Non-spiritual, self-enhancement values, did not show any association. Results suggest that developing spiritual values may promote well-being through enabling individuals to find meaning and purpose in life.</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • University of Lincoln (Historic Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Journal of Religion and Health

Volume

53

Issue

4

Publisher

Springer

ISSN

0022-4197

Date Submitted

2021-08-05

Date Accepted

2013-12-10

Date of First Publication

2014-01-04

Date of Final Publication

2014-01-10

Date Document First Uploaded

2021-08-03

ePrints ID

45940

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