Self Confidence
Self Confidence
Self Confidence
ability, power, etc. One's self confidence increases from experiences of having satisfactorily
completed particular activities.[1] It is a positive[2] belief that in the future one can generally accomplish
what one wishes to do. Self-confidence is not the same as self-esteem, which is an evaluation of
one's own worth, whereas self-confidence is more specifically trust in one's ability to achieve some
goal, which one meta-analysis suggested is similar to generalization of self-efficacy.[3] Abraham
Maslow and many others after him have emphasized the need to distinguish between self-
confidence as a generalized personality characteristic, and self-confidence with respect to a specific
task, ability or challenge (i.e. self-efficacy). Self-confidence typically refers to general self-
confidence. This is different from self-efficacy, which psychologist Albert Bandura has defined as a
“belief in one’s ability to succeed in specific situations or accomplish a task”[4] and therefore is the
term that more accurately refers to specific self-confidence. Psychologists have long noted that a
person can possess self-confidence that he or she can complete a specific task (self-efficacy) (e.g.
cook a good meal or write a good novel) even though they may lack general self-confidence, or
conversely be self-confident though they lack the self-efficacy to achieve a particular task (e.g. write
a novel). These two types of self-confidence are, however, correlated with each other, and for this
reason can be easily conflated.[5]
History[edit]
Ideas about the causes and effects of self-confidence have appeared in English language
publications describing characteristics of a sacrilegious attitude toward God,[6] the character of the
British empire,[7] and the culture of colonial-era American society[8] (where it seemed to connote
arrogance and be a negative attribute.)
In 1890, the philosopher William James in his Principles of Psychology wrote, “Believe what is in the
line of your needs, for only by such belief is the need fulled ... Have faith that you can successfully
make it, and your feet are nerved to its accomplishment,” expressing how self-confidence could be a
virtue. That same year, Dr. Frederick Needham in his presidential address to the opening of
the British Medical Journal’s Section of Psychology praised a progressive new architecture of an
asylum accommodation for insane patients as increasing their self-confidence by offering them
greater “liberty of action, extended exercise, and occupation, thus generating self-confidence and
becoming, not only excellent tests of the sanity of the patient, but operating powerfully in promoting
recovery.”[9] In doing so, he seemed to early on suggest that self-confidence may bear a scientific
relation to mental health.
With the arrival of World War I, psychologists praised self-confidence as greatly decreasing nervous
tension, allaying fear, and ridding the battlefield of terror; they argued that soldiers who cultivated a
strong and healthy body would also acquire greater self-confidence while fighting.[10] At the height of
the Temperance social reform movement of the 1920s, psychologists associated self-confidence in
men with remaining at home and taking care of the family when they were not working.[11] During
the Great Depression, Philip Eisenberg and Paul Lazerfeld noted how a sudden negative change in
one's circumstances, especially a loss of a job, could lead to decreased self-confidence, but more
commonly if the jobless person believes the fault of his unemployment is his. They also noted how if
individuals do not have a job long enough, they became apathetic and lost all self-confidence.[12]
In 1943, Abraham Maslow in his paper “A Theory of Human Motivation” argued that an individual
was only motivated to acquire self-confidence (one component of “esteem”) after he or she had
achieved what they needed for physiological survival, safety, and love and belonging. He claimed
that satisfaction of self-esteem led to feelings of self-confidence that, once attained, led to a desire
for “self-actualization."[13] As material standards of most people rapidly rose in developed countries
after World War II and fulfilled their material needs, a plethora of widely cited academic research
about-confidence and many related concepts like self-esteem and self-efficacy emerged.[14][15][16][17]