Abstract
Across cultures and generations, humans have continuously sought to understand their place in time: where they come from, who they are, and what role they play in shaping the future. Despite extensive research on psychological needs, dominant theories of motivation—Self-Determination Theory (SDT)—have focused primarily on present-oriented interpersonal and intrapersonal contexts. In this review, we introduce the Historical Psychological Need Satisfaction Model (HPNSM), a novel framework that embeds the three core psychological needs of SDT—relatedness, competence, and autonomy—into individuals’ historical self-construal. We propose three corresponding constructs: historical belongingness (a sense of connection to a transgenerational historical community), historical self-efficacy (the belief that one can make a difference in history), and historical agency (the capacity to choose and author one’s historical commitments). We review relevant theoretical and empirical literature on historical identity, collective memory, and sociotemporal motivation, and argue that historical experiences can serve as meaningful sources of psychological need satisfaction. We discuss how HPNSM can inform research on youth civic engagement, national identity, intergenerational transmission, and cross-cultural psychology. By bridging individual motivation with cultural-historical context, this model advances a temporally expanded understanding of psychological needs and opens new avenues for research in identity, meaning, and societal development.
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