• Journal of personality · Jun 1987

    Explanatory style and illness.

    • C Peterson and M E Seligman.
    • J Pers. 1987 Jun 1; 55 (2): 237-65.

    AbstractExplanatory style is an individual difference that influences people's response to bad events. The present article discusses the possibility that a pessimistic explanatory style makes illness more likely. Several studies suggest that people who offer internal, stable, and global explanations for bad events are at increased risk for morbidity and mortality. We tentatively conclude that passivity, pessimism, and low morale foreshadow disease and death, although the process by which this occurs is unclear.

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