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Personality
Psychology PSY 405
VU
Lesson
15
SULLIVAN'S
INTERPERSONAL THEORY
The
organization of personality consists of
interpersonal events and interpersonal
behavior.
Sullivan's
Theory focuses on:
1-Personality
as hypothetical entity
2-
This personality is a part of an
interpersonal situation and interpersonal
behavior.
Example
Personality
of a University teacher or a
student
Now
the personality development of a
university teacher or a student is the
result of interpersonal
situations
or
events.
The
word interpersonal refers to relationship
between two or more people or events
that take place between
people.
Example
Child's
relation with family
Friends
or Neighbors.
Core
Concepts
1-
Dynamism
2-
Energy Transformation
a-
Self System
b-
Personifications
3-Cognitive
Process
Experience
Occurs in Three Modes These
are:
a-
Prototaxic
b-
Parataxic
c-
Syntaxic
4-The
Dynamics of Personality
5-The
Development of Personality
6-Research
a-
Interview
b-
Research on Schizophrenia
Harry
Stack Sullivan: Biographical
sketch
Harry
Stack Sullivan was born in
1892 in Norwich, near New
York and died in1949 in
Paris.
He
received his medical degree
in 1917 and served with the
armed forces in World War
I.
In
1922 he met William Alanson
White, a leader in American
Neuropsychiatry.
Then
he conducted investigations in Schizophrenia
that established his reputation as a
clinician.
Harry
Stack Sullivan was the creator of a new
viewpoint that is known as the
interpersonal theory of
Psychiatry.
Its major tenet as it relates to
personality is "the relatively
enduring pattern of recurrent
interpersonal
situations which characterize a human
life".. Personality is a hypothetical
entity that cannot
be
isolated from interpersonal
situations, and interpersonal behavior is
all that can be observed
as
53
Personality
Psychology PSY 405
VU
personality
Sullivan
sees the individual as the object of
study because the individual
does not and cannot exist
apart
from
his or her relations with
other people. From the first
day of life, the baby is a
part of an interpersonal
situation,
and throughout the rest of
its life it remains a member
of a social field. Even a wild
cat who has
resigned
from society carries with
him into the wilderness memories of
former personal relationships
that
continue
to influence his thinking and
acting.
Sullivan
does not deny the importance
of heredity and maturation in shaping the
organism; he feels that
human
is the product of social interactions.
More over, the interpersonal
experiences of a person may
alter
his
or her purely physiological functioning,
so that even the organism loses its
status as a biological
entity
and
becomes a social organism with
its own socialized ways of
breathing, digesting,
eliminating,
circulating,
and so forth.
For
Sullivan, the science of psychiatry is
allied with social
psychology, and his theory of
personality bears
the
imprint of his strong preference for
social psychological concepts and
variables.
Sullivan
insists repeatedly that
personality is a purely hypothetical
entity, "an illusion," which
cannot be
observed
apart from interpersonal situations.
The unit of study is the
interpersonal situation and not
the
person.
The organization of personality
consists of interpersonal events
rather than intra-psychic
ones.
Personality
only manifests itself when
the person is behaving in
relation to one or more other
individuals.
These
people do not need to be
present; in fact they can
even be illusory or nonexistent
figures.
Dynamism
is the smallest unit that
can be employed in the study of the
individual. It is defined as
"the
relatively
enduring pattern of energy
transformations, which recurrently
characterize the organism in its
duration
as a living organism" An energy
transformation is any form of
behavior. It may be overt
and
public
like talking, or covert and
private like thinking and
fantasying.
Because
dynamism is a pattern of behavior
that endures and recurs, it is
about the same thing as a
habit.
This
means that a new feature
may be added to a pattern
without changing the pattern
just as long as it is
not
significantly different from the
other contents of the envelope. It is
significantly different it changes
the
pattern
into a new pattern. For
example, two apples may be
quite different in appearance and
yet be
identified
as apples because their
differences are not
important. However, an apple and a
banana are
different
in significant respects and consequently
form two different
patterns.
1-The
Self-System
Anxiety
is a product of interpersonal relations,
being transmitted originally
from the mother to the
infant
and
later in life by threats to
one's security. To avoid or
minimize actual or potential anxiety,
people adopt
various
types of protective measures and
supervisory controls over
their behavior. One learns,
for example,
that
one can avoid punishment by
conforming to parents' wishes.
These security measures form
the self-
system
that sanctions certain forms of
behavior (the good-me self) and
forbids other forms (the
bad-me
self).
The
self-system as the guardian of one's
security tends to become
isolated from the rest of the
personality;
it
excludes information that is incongruous
with its present
organization and fails thereby to
profit from
experience.
Since the self guards the person
from anxiety, it is held in
high esteem and is protected
from
criticism.
As the self-system grows in complexity and
independence, it prevents the person from
making
objective
judgments of his or her own behavior and
it glosses over obvious
contradictions between what
the
person
really is and what the self-system
says he or she is. In general, the more
experiences people have
with
anxiety, the more inflated their
self-system becomes and the more it
becomes dissociated from the
rest
of
the personality. Although the self-system
serves the useful purpose of
reducing anxiety, it
interferes
with
one's ability to live
constructively with others.
2-Personifications
A
personification is an image that an
individual has of him or
herself or of another person. It is a
complex
of
feelings, attitudes, and conceptions that
grows out of experiences with
need-satisfaction and anxiety.
For
example, the baby develops a
personification of a good mother by
being nursed and cared for
by her.
Any
interpersonal relationship that
involves satisfaction tends to
build up a favorable picture of the
satis-
54
Personality
Psychology PSY 405
VU
fying
agent. On the other hand, the baby's
personification of a bad mother
results from experiences
with
her
that evokes anxiety. The
anxious mother becomes
personified as the bad mother.
Ultimately, these two
personifications
of the mother along with any
others that may be formed,
such as the overprotective
mother,
fuse together to form a
complex personification.
3-Cognitive
Process
Sullivan's
unique contribution regarding the place
of cognition in the affairs of
personality is his
threefold
classification
of experience.
Experience,
he says, occurs in three modes;
these are
Prototaxic
Parataxic
Syntaxic
1-Prototaxic
experience "may be regarded as the discrete series of
momentary states of the sensitive
organism".
This type of experience is similar to the
"stream of consciousness," the raw
sensations, images,
and
feelings that flow through
the mind of a sensate being.
They have no necessary connection"
among
themselves
and possess no meaning for the
experiencing person.
Example
The
prototaxic mode of experience is found in
its purest form during the
early months of life and is
the
necessary
precondition for the appearance of the
other two modes.
2-The
Parataxic mode of thinking consists of
seeing causal relationship between
events that occur at
about
the
same time but which
are not logically related.
When ever a black cat
comes my way I face disaster,
we
see
causal connections between experiences
that have nothing to do with one
another.
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