This document reports on a study that investigated the relationship between guilt proneness and counterproductive work behavior (CWB). The study found that individuals high in guilt proneness, as measured by the Guilt and Shame Proneness scale, engaged in less frequent counterproductive work behaviors compared to those low in guilt proneness, after controlling for other known correlates of CWB like gender, age, job satisfaction, and negative affect. The study suggests that guilt proneness, characterized by a predisposition to feel negatively about personal wrongdoings, predicts less unethical behavior at work in the form of counterproductive work behaviors.
TRACING A ROYAL PATH, virtues of visiting Ko Pha-ngan Tat Samui
Ko Pha-ngan is Thailand's fifth largest island located in the Gulf of Thailand near Samui Island. It has a long history of human settlement dating back over 1,300 years. The island is known for its natural beauty, with many pristine beaches, coral reefs, waterfalls, forests and mountains. It also has a thriving tourism industry, most notably the full moon parties on Hat Rin beach, but there is much natural beauty throughout the island to explore beyond the parties. The geography contributes to Ko Pha-ngan's appeal as a nature destination with diverse landscapes.
Between 3000-1200 BC, three important civilizations flourished in the Aegean region: the Cycladic civilization on the Cyclades islands, the Minoan civilization on Crete, and the Mycenaean civilization on the Greek mainland. The Minoans were known for their palace at Knossos on Crete, which after an earthquake was rebuilt even more grandly in the New Palace period around 1700 BC. Minoan art showed naturalistic styles and was inspired by nature, as seen in frescoes depicting plants, animals, and rituals like bull leaping. The Mycenaeans on the mainland were known for their fortified citadels and shaft graves containing gold funeral masks and other
This document reports on a study that investigated the relationship between guilt proneness and counterproductive work behavior (CWB). The study found that individuals high in guilt proneness, as measured by the Guilt and Shame Proneness scale, engaged in less frequent counterproductive work behaviors compared to those low in guilt proneness, after controlling for other known correlates of CWB like gender, age, job satisfaction, and negative affect. The study suggests that guilt proneness, characterized by a predisposition to feel negatively about personal wrongdoings, predicts less unethical behavior at work in the form of counterproductive work behaviors.
TRACING A ROYAL PATH, virtues of visiting Ko Pha-ngan Tat Samui
Ko Pha-ngan is Thailand's fifth largest island located in the Gulf of Thailand near Samui Island. It has a long history of human settlement dating back over 1,300 years. The island is known for its natural beauty, with many pristine beaches, coral reefs, waterfalls, forests and mountains. It also has a thriving tourism industry, most notably the full moon parties on Hat Rin beach, but there is much natural beauty throughout the island to explore beyond the parties. The geography contributes to Ko Pha-ngan's appeal as a nature destination with diverse landscapes.
Between 3000-1200 BC, three important civilizations flourished in the Aegean region: the Cycladic civilization on the Cyclades islands, the Minoan civilization on Crete, and the Mycenaean civilization on the Greek mainland. The Minoans were known for their palace at Knossos on Crete, which after an earthquake was rebuilt even more grandly in the New Palace period around 1700 BC. Minoan art showed naturalistic styles and was inspired by nature, as seen in frescoes depicting plants, animals, and rituals like bull leaping. The Mycenaeans on the mainland were known for their fortified citadels and shaft graves containing gold funeral masks and other