Personal Motivation: A Model for Decision Making

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Bloomsbury Academic, Apr 30, 2000 - Psychology - 176 pages

A new text for positive psychology, this book places the self as the decision maker at the center of the motivational process. Personal Motivation represents a new approach for student and scholar to consider motivation theory, self theory, and decision theory. It supports current thinking, which sees the self as possessing power for growth and change. Challenging traditional motivation and personality theories, it puts personality within the context of a new motivation model. It also challenges current thinking by distinguishing between choosing and deciding, and by describing the various characteristics of decision making as uniquely human.

The self is reciprocally influenced by three motivational systems and is formed by the motivational process itself. A triarchic theory of motivation is proposed consisting of interdependent systems: formative, operational,and thematic. This book places the study of psychology back in the arena of life by developing a model of motivation and decision making immediately relevant to personal experience.

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Contents

Self and Will
12
Personal Motivation
37
Three Ways to Go
55
Copyright

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About the author (2000)

ROBERT P. CAVALIER is Dana Professor of Psychology at Elmira College. He is a counseling and organizational psychologist with interests in human motivation and organizational behavior.

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