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308 GORDON ALLPORT
IN CONTEXT
APPROACH
G
ordon Allport is sometimes
referred to as one of the
founding fathers of
personality psychology, as he was
Trait theory
the first psychologist of modern
BEFORE
times to embark on a dedicated
People… are busy
study of personality. Since the early
2nd century BCE
Galen
leading their lives into
work on the four temperaments by
classifies human temperament
the future, whereas
Hippocrates (c.400 BCE) and Galen
according to the four humors.
psychology, for the most
(c.150 CE), there seems to have been
1890
In
Principles of
part, is busy tracing
no attempt to classify personality in
Psychology
, William James
them into the past.
any detail. In the 19th century,
makes an early attempt to
personality was barely mentioned
Gordon Allport
define the self as having both
in psychology, though there was
an “I” (the knowing self) and a
much discussion of the self, or “ego.”
“me” (the experiencing self).
In the early 20th century,
the two predominant schools of
AFTER
psychology—psychoanalysis and
1946
Raymond Cattell
behaviorism—were polar opposites
develops his 16PF (Personality
in approach. Both were highly
The American psychologist Gordon
Factors) questionnaire, based
developed and influential schools
Allport had fundamental problems
on Allport and Odbert’s
that remain powerful (as well as
with both of these approaches. He
lexical hypothesis.
enduringly controversial) to this
thought that behaviorism was
day. Behaviorism, being interested
wrong to discount the “person”
1970s
Hans J. Eysenck creates
only in how we acquire (or learn) our
doing the learning, because each
the PEN (Psychoticism,
behavior, had nothing to say about
person is unique and their perception
Extraversion, Neurotisicm)
personality; while psychoanalysis
is part of the process. He also
personality questionnaire.
offered an in-depth approach, arguing
considered psychoanalysis to be
1993
American psychologist
for the existence of an unknowable
inadequate for explaining personality
Dan P. McAdam demonstrates
unconscious that controls personality
and behavior because it placed too
the idiographic method in his
but reveals itself only fractionally
much importance on a person’s
book
The Stories We Live By
.
and accidentally by slips of the
past, ignoring their current context
tongue and in dream symbols.
and motivations. His view was
Personality is formed from…
…
cardinal traits
or
…
common traits
,
…
secondary traits
,
“ruling passions”, such
such as honesty or
such as being nervous when
as altruism. Not everyone
aggression. In the
meeting strangers or laughing
has a cardinal trait,
absence of cardinal
at inappropriate moments.
traits, personality is
These traits are evoked by
and those that do
shaped by these traits.
specific situations.
are often famous for it.
PSYCHOLOGY OF DIFFERENCE 309
See also:
Galen 18–19 ■ William James 38–45 ■ Sigmund Freud 92–99 ■ Carl Rogers 130–37 ■ Abraham Maslow 138–39 ■
Martin Seligman 200–01 ■ Paul Salkovskis 212–13 ■ Raymond Cattell 314–15 ■ Hans J. Eysenck 316–21 ■ William Stern 334
affirmed when, as a young college
Dilthey, but had first been put into
work in general is not known for
graduate, he paid a visit to Sigmund
practice by Allport’s university
its focus on empirical research;
Freud in Vienna. On first meeting,
tutor, William Stern. The first
he was more of a theorist, almost
to make small talk, Allport told
method, the nomothetic, aims to
a philosopher. Yet his very first
Freud of a small boy he had met
be as objective and scientific as
paper,
Personality Traits: Their
on the train on the way, who was
possible, and it is exemplified in
Classification and Measurement
,
afraid of getting dirty and refused
the study of human intelligence.
cowritten with his brother Floyd,
to sit near anyone dirty, despite
This involves obtaining test results
was an excellent example of the
his mother’s encouragement.
from large populations of people,
nomothetic method. One of his
Perhaps, Allport suggested, the
on personality traits such as
last major pieces of work, the
child had learned this dirt phobia
extraversion and introversion.
analysis of Jenny Masterson,
from his mother, a neat and rather
Results can be submitted to a
was an extraordinarily detailed
domineering woman. Freud then
sophisticated analysis, resulting
example of the idiographic method.
asked, “And was that little boy
in a number of general conclusions,
you?” Freud’s reduction of this
such as the percentages of people
The lexical hypothesis
small observation of Allport’s
who are extravert or introvert, or
In his first study, Allport and his
to some unconscious episode
variations linked to age, gender, or
brother reported their research
from his own childhood seemed,
geography. However, this method
on personality traits. They asked
to Allport, dismissive of all his
does not aim to comment in any
the participants to complete a
current motivations and intentions.
way on traits at the individual level;
personality questionnaire, and
Throughout his work, Allport
it focuses on comparative comments
to ask three people who knew
emphasizes the present over the
and conclusions about a certain trait,
them well to complete it too;
past, though later in his life he paid
rather than any particular person.
this reflected the Allport brothers’
more attention to psychoanalysis
This was the method that the
view that personality is forged
as a supplement to other methods.
behaviorist B.F. Skinner used for
in relationship to others. They
Allport argued for an approach
his observations of rat behavior.
concluded from their results that
to the study of human learning
The second method, the
there is a case for identifying traits,
and personality that was reasoned,
idiographic, stands in direct
and for attempting to measure
eclectic, and conceptually open-
opposition to the nomothetic
them. They also believed they
minded. He took some of what he
method; it studies one individual
had proven the possibility of
believed from prevailing approaches,
in breadth and depth, taking into
developing a complete and
but his central belief is that the
account their biography, their
sensitive instrument for the
uniqueness of each individual and
personality traits, and their
measurement of personality. ❯❯
his or her personality is largely—
relationships, as well as how
but not exclusively—forged in
they are seen and experienced
human relationships.
by others. This method is much
closer to the psychoanalytic
Theory of personality
method with its focus on one
Allport’s idea of personality is a
person, one life.
complex amalgam of traits, human
Allport said that while the
Types exist not in people
relationships, current context,
nomothetic method was a way
or in nature, but rather in
and motivation. He identified two
of describing traits, it had little
the eye of the observer.
distinctly different approaches
explanatory power; whereas the
Gordon Allport
to the study of personality—the
idiographic method, though unable
nomothetic and idiographic
to draw any general conclusions,
methods—both of which had been
could explain one person in
devised by the German philosophers
illuminating detail. He was to
Wilhelm Windelband and Wilhelm
use both methods, though his
310 GORDON ALLPORT
someone that it guides and unifies
their life in both conscious and
paranoid
unconscious ways; virtually every
awkward stubborn mischievous eager bossy
act is traceable to its influence.
judgmental loyal envious acute tender vain devout patient
sarcastic
In his later years, Allport
forgiving honest bashful acquisitive
cold shy
considered a person’s cardinal
cheerful curious acerbic aggressive proudwitty polite
traits as contributing to the
inventive arrogant artistic self-centred
bold
daring ambitious timid sociable sentimental
proprium
: the essential drives, core
kind moody
touchy fretful reserved confident
needs, and desires of a person. This
shallow
talkative
organized inconsiderate
concept goes beyond the idea of
efficient trustful helpful
temperament, and is more akin to a
imaginative
guiding purpose that will always
press for expression. As an example
of the
proprium
, Allport gave the
Norwegian polar explorer Roald
Amundsen, who had one dominant
passion from the age of 15: he
Allport and Odbert’s lexical hypothesis
wanted to be a polar explorer. The
rested on the idea that the most important
obstacles to his ambition seemed
and relevant personality differences are
insurmountable, and the temptation
reflected by language; they identified 18,000
to relinquish his dreams was great,