A Qualitative Exploration of Chinese Self-Love
Although self-love is an important topic, it has not been viewed as appropriate for psychological research, especially in China. We conducted two studies to understand how Chinese people view self-love. In the first study, we surveyed 109 Chinese people about the dimensions of self-love using an ope...
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Frontiers Media S.A.
2021-03-01
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doaj-a1e8c515abcf476daa3ade03ca45239d2021-03-29T17:08:14ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782021-03-011210.3389/fpsyg.2021.585719585719A Qualitative Exploration of Chinese Self-LoveLi Ming XueXi Ting HuangNa WuTong YueAlthough self-love is an important topic, it has not been viewed as appropriate for psychological research, especially in China. We conducted two studies to understand how Chinese people view self-love. In the first study, we surveyed 109 Chinese people about the dimensions of self-love using an open-ended questionnaire. In the second study, 18 participants were selected by means of intensity sampling and interviewed about the connotations and structure of Chinese self-love. The two studies revealed three important aspects of the Chinese understanding of self-love: (1) self-love has four dimensions: self, family, others, and society; (2) it comprises five components: self-cherishing, self-acceptance, self-restraint, self-responsibility, and self-persistence; and (3) the five components of self-love are linked together to form a stable personality structure. The reliability and validity of the two studies were strong. Finally, the results showed that Chinese self-love is dominated by Confucian culture, which provides guiding principles for how to be human. At the same time, it shows that there are differences in the understanding of self-love between Chinese and Western cultures, which provides an empirical basis for further research based on cross-cultural psychology and self-love psychology.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.585719/fullself-lovequalitative studyChinesepublic viewconnotationstructure |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Li Ming Xue Xi Ting Huang Na Wu Tong Yue |
spellingShingle |
Li Ming Xue Xi Ting Huang Na Wu Tong Yue A Qualitative Exploration of Chinese Self-Love Frontiers in Psychology self-love qualitative study Chinese public view connotation structure |
author_facet |
Li Ming Xue Xi Ting Huang Na Wu Tong Yue |
author_sort |
Li Ming Xue |
title |
A Qualitative Exploration of Chinese Self-Love |
title_short |
A Qualitative Exploration of Chinese Self-Love |
title_full |
A Qualitative Exploration of Chinese Self-Love |
title_fullStr |
A Qualitative Exploration of Chinese Self-Love |
title_full_unstemmed |
A Qualitative Exploration of Chinese Self-Love |
title_sort |
qualitative exploration of chinese self-love |
publisher |
Frontiers Media S.A. |
series |
Frontiers in Psychology |
issn |
1664-1078 |
publishDate |
2021-03-01 |
description |
Although self-love is an important topic, it has not been viewed as appropriate for psychological research, especially in China. We conducted two studies to understand how Chinese people view self-love. In the first study, we surveyed 109 Chinese people about the dimensions of self-love using an open-ended questionnaire. In the second study, 18 participants were selected by means of intensity sampling and interviewed about the connotations and structure of Chinese self-love. The two studies revealed three important aspects of the Chinese understanding of self-love: (1) self-love has four dimensions: self, family, others, and society; (2) it comprises five components: self-cherishing, self-acceptance, self-restraint, self-responsibility, and self-persistence; and (3) the five components of self-love are linked together to form a stable personality structure. The reliability and validity of the two studies were strong. Finally, the results showed that Chinese self-love is dominated by Confucian culture, which provides guiding principles for how to be human. At the same time, it shows that there are differences in the understanding of self-love between Chinese and Western cultures, which provides an empirical basis for further research based on cross-cultural psychology and self-love psychology. |
topic |
self-love qualitative study Chinese public view connotation structure |
url |
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.585719/full |
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