Sports Future Anxiety and its Relationship with Causal Attribution Types among some Combat Athletes | ||||
Assiut Journal of Sport Science and Arts | ||||
Article 12, Volume 2013, Issue 1, December 2013, Page 256-277 PDF (484.27 K) | ||||
Document Type: Original Article | ||||
DOI: 10.21608/ajssa.2013.70983 | ||||
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Authors | ||||
Mona Mohamed Kamal Hijazi1; Hossam El Den Abdel Razik Hawary2 | ||||
1Lecturer in the Department of Combats & Aquatics, Faculty of Physical Education, Sadat City University, Egypt | ||||
2Lecturer in the Department of Sports Training, Faculty of Physical Education, Bany Swaif University, Egypt | ||||
Abstract | ||||
The Analytical approach maintains that anxiety is a warning signal of danger that is, letting out the pent-up emotions from the unconsciousness to the consciousness, which, In turn, urges the Ego's defences to face this danger (17). The Behaviourists, however, consider anxiety as an acquired/learned behaviour from the environment in which a person lives in terms of positive and negative reinforcements. Behaviourists do not believe in the unconscious motives, but they explain anxiety in terms of action-response classical conditioning, that is, the association of a new motive with an old one. The new motive becomes able to recall the old motive's response (7). This means that anxiety is an acquired, conditioned response of fear; and the individual is unaware of its normal, original impetus (6). Whereas Humanists see anxiety as fear of the future, and that each future event bears a threat to one's existence and humanity. Anxiety stems from what an individual expects to happen and not from the individual's past (6). | ||||
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