Abstract
In a previous article it was concluded that Dickstein's Death Concern Scale was a measure of two components, the conscious contemplation of death and the negative evaluation of death. In this study, factor analyses of 2 sets of data from church-going adults support this conclusion. To clarify the nature of these components Templer's Death Anxiety Scale and a set of questions about acceptance of death were administered to the same subjects. The results support the contention that negative evaluation and death anxiety are very similar constructs. The nature of conscious contemplation is less clear.
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