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Personality
Psychology PSY 405
VU
Lesson
27
GORDON
ALLPORT: A TRAIT THEORY OF
PERSONALITY
1-
Biographical Sketch
2-
What is personality?
3-
Criteria for Adequate
Personality Theory
4-
Allport's Concept of Traits
5-
Kinds of Traits
i)
Cardinal
Traits
ii)
Central
Traits
iii)
Secondary
Dispositions
6-
Self
(An
Eight Stage Developmental
Sequence That Starts at
Birth and Goes To
Adulthood)
7-
FUNCTIONAL AUTONOMY
8-APPLICATION:
THE STUDY OF VALUES
i)
Theoretical
ii)
Economic
iii)
Aesthetic
iv)
Social
v)
Political
vi)
Religious
9-
Summary
10-
Evaluation
Trait
A
trait is a predisposition or way to
respond in a manner to various kinds of
stimuli.
A
trait is what accounts for
the more permanent, enduring features of
our behavior.
"Generalized
action tendencies".
The
"Traits" of Traits
i)
A
trait has more than nominal
existence.
ii)
A
trait is more generalized than a
habit.
iii)
A
trait is dynamic or at least determinative in
behavior.
iv)
A
trait's existence may be established
empirically.
A
trait is not synonymous with
moral or social
judgment:
Despite
the fact that many traits
(e.g.,
sincerity,
loyalty, greed) are subject to
conventional social judgment, they
still represent true traits
of
personality.
Ideally, one would first
discover traits as they
exist in a given individual and
then seek neutral,
devaluated
words to identify them.
A
trait may be viewed in light
of either the personality that
contains it or its
distribution
in the
population
at large: Take
autoeroticism as an illustration. Like
any other trait, it has
both unique
and
universal
aspects.
When viewed uniquely,
autoeroticism could be studied in
terms of the role it plays in
a
given
individual's personality.
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Acts
or even habits that are
inconsistent with a trait are
not proof of the nonexistence of the
trait:
As
an illustration, consider Eve Smith
who is characteristically neat in
terms of her personal
appearance;
with never a hair out of
place and her attire impeccable, she
indubitably possesses the
trait
of
neatness. But one would
never know this by examining
her desk, room, or car. Her
personal
belongings
in each case are carelessly
arranged, cluttered, and downright
sloppy. Why the apparent
contradiction?
Types
of Traits: Pervasiveness within a
Personality
1-
Cardinal Traits:
If
a trait is extremely pervasive, so
pervasive that almost all a
person's activities can be
traced to its
influence,
it is a cardinal
trait in
Allport's system. This
highly generalized disposition cannot
remain
hidden
unless, of course, it happens to be
something like exclusiveness, in which
case its possessor
might
become
a hermit, whose traits were
known to no one. In other instances,
however, this kind of
master
sentiment
or ruling passion makes its
possessor famous or infamous. Allport
insisted that very few
people
possess
a cardinal trait.
The
meaning of a cardinal trait
may be readily grasped by
considering the many trait
adjectives derived
from
historical and fictional characters,
e.g., when someone is referred to as
being a chauvinist,
Machiavellian,
Don Juan, Scrooge, or Joan
of Arc. Or consider that Albert
Schweitzer was said to have had
one
cardinal disposition in his
life-"reverence for every
living organism." Similarly,
Leo Tolstoy was
said
to
have been endowed with a burning
passion for the "oversimplification of
life."
2
Central Traits:
Less
pervasive but still quite
generalized characteristics of the individual
are what Allport termed
central
traits-
the
so-called building blocks of personality.
These traits might best be
regarded as those attributes
which
would be stressed in writing a
carefully defined letter of
recommendation, e.g., outgoing,
sentimental,
attentive, sociable, or vivacious.
Specifically, central traits
are those tendencies that a
person
often
expresses that people around
him can readily discern. In a
rather hypothetical manner, Allport
asked:
"How
many central traits does the
average individual possess?" He
approached this question by
asking
ninety-three
students "to think of some
one individual of your own
sex whom you know
well" and "to
describe
him or her by writing words, phrases, or
sentences that express
fairly well what seem to
you to be
the
essential characteristics of this
person" (1 961,p.366).
3-
Secondary Traits:
Dispositions
which are less conspicuous,
less generalized, less consistent, and
thus less relevant to
the
definition
of a personality are called
secondary
traits. Food
preferences, specific attitudes, and
other
situationally
determined characteristics of the person
would be classified under
this rubric. Consider,
for
instance,
a person whose central
traits are dominance and
assertiveness, which he manifests in
practically
every
interpersonal encounter. This
person might also have as a
secondary trait submissiveness,
which he
displays
only in relation to police
who dutifully stop him
for speeding, running red lights, and
ignoring
stop
signs ("Yes, officer," "No,
officer," "You're right
officer, etc.).
Common
versus Individual
Traits
Allport
also distinguished between common and
individual traits. The
former, common
traits (also
called
dimensional
or
nomothetic
traits)
includes any generalized disposition to
which most people within a
given
culture
can be reasonably compared. We might say,
for example, that some
people are more assertive
than
others
or that some people are more
polite than others. The
logic for assuming the existence of
common
traits
is that members of a given
culture are subject to similar
evolutionary and social influences;
therefore,
they
develop roughly comparable modes of
adjustment. Examples include proficiency in the
use of
language,
political and/ or social attitudes,
value orientations, anxiety,
and conformity. The majority
of
people
within our culture could be
measurably compared with one another on
these common dimensions.
The
proprium: a real
self?
No
personologist, least of all
Allport, believes that
personality is a mere bundle of
unrelated traits.
Personality
embodies a unity, consistency, and
integration of traits. It is therefore
reasonable to suppose
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that
there is an overall principle that
unifies traits, attitudes, values,
motives, and experiences. For
Allport,
the
problem of identifying and describing the
nature of personality integration requires an
all inclusive
construct
such as the self, ego, or style of
life. Formerly, in less
scientific days, people
called it a soul. But
all
these terms had accumulated too
many ambiguous connotations and semantic
ambiguities for
Allport's
taste.
So he introduced a new term-the
proprium.
Allport's
humanistic orientation to personality is
nowhere more clearly revealed
than in his concept
of
proprium,
defined as "the self-as-known-
that which is experienced as warm and
central, as of importance"
(I
968a, p. 4) It's the "me" part of
subjective experience. It's
selfhood.
·
1-
The Sense of Bodily Self:
A
sense of one's own body,
including bodily sensations,
attests to
one's
existence and therefore remains a
lifelong anchor for self
awareness.
·
2-
The Sense of Self-Identity:
The
second aspect of the proprium to
unfold self-identity, is
most
evident
when, through language, the child
recognizes himself or herself as a
distinct and constant
point
of reference. Unquestionably, the most
important anchorage for
one's self-identity is
one's
own
name, e.g., "That's Tommy (me) in the
mirror." Clothing, toys, and
other precious possessions
also
strengthen this sense of identity,
but identity is not firmly
established all at once.
For
"instance,
a 2-year-old may be unaware that he is
cold, feels tired, or needs to
eliminate. Fantasy
and
reality are often blurred
and the former often dominates play
life.
·
3-
The Sense of Self-Esteem or
Pride: Essentially,
self-esteem is an individual's evaluation
of
herself
or himself. The urge to want to do
everything for oneself and
take all the credit is one
of the
most
conspicuous aspects of a 2-year-old's
behavior. Parents frequently consider
this the age of
negativism,
since the child resists almost
any adult proposal as a
threat to integrity and
autonomy.
Later,
by the age of 4 or 5, self-esteem
acquires a competitive flavor,
reflected by the child's
delighted
"I beat you!" when she or he
wins a game.
·
4-
The Sense of Self-Extension: From
approximately 4 to 6 years of age, the
proprium is
elaborated
through self-extension, that is, the
sense that although other
people and things are
not
inside
my physical body, they are
still very much a part of
me-they are "mine." With it
comes
jealous
possessiveness, e.g., "This is my
ball,"
"I own
the
doll house." My
mommy,
my
sister,
my
dog,
my
house
are regarded as warm parts of
oneself and are to be guarded against
loss, especially
against
takeover by another child. Later, we
extend our loyalties to our
families, our churches,
and
our
nation; we can also become
preoccupied with material possessions in
this respect.
·
5-
The Self-Image: How
others view "me" is another
aspect of selfhood that
emerges during
childhood.
Now is the time when the
child realizes that parents expect
him or her to be "good"
while
at times he or she is "naughty." As yet,
however, the child has no
clearly developed
conscience,
nor any image of how she or
he would like to be as an adult.
Allport writes: "In
childhood
the capacity to think of oneself as one
is, as one wants to be, and as one ought
to be is
merely
germinal" (1961, p.
123).
·
6-
The Sense of Self as a
Rational Coper: Between
6 and 12 years of age, the child begins
to fully
realize
that he or she has the
rational capacity to find
solutions to life's problems and thereby
cope
effectively
with reality demands.
Reflective and formal thought appear, and
the child begins to
think
about thinking. But the
child does not yet trust
himself or herself to be an independent
moral
agent,
but rather dogmatically believes
that his or her family, religion, and
peer group are right;
this
stage of propriate development reflects
intense moral and social
conformity.
·
7-
Propriate Striving: Allport
believed that the core
problem for the adolescent
is the selection of
an
occupation or other life
goal. The adolescent knows
that the future must follow
a plan and, in
this
sense, her or his selfhood
assumes a dimension entirely
lacking in childhood (Allport,
1961).
Pursuing
long range goals, having a sense of
directedness and intentionality in
striving for defined
objectives,
imparting to life a sense of purpose-
this is the essence of Propriate
striving, although it
may
be quite elementary in the
adolescent.
7-
Functional Autonomy: The
Past is Past
Basic
to Allport's trait theory is the
underlying idea that
personality is a dynamic (motivated)
growing
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system.
In fact, Allport held that
"any theory of personality
pivots upon its analysis of the nature
of
motivation
(1961, p. 196).
Allport
proposed that an adequate theory of human
motivation must meet four
requirements. First, it must
recognize
the contemporaneity
of motives. While
knowledge about a person's
past helps to reveal the
present
course of her or his life,
Allport believed that such
historical facts are useless
unless they can be
shown
to be dynamically active in the present.
In his words, "Past motives
explain nothing unless they
are
also
present motives" (1961, p.
220). Thus, It is the current state of
the individual- not what
happened
during
toilet training or weaning-
that is central.
Second,
it must be a pluralistic
theory, allowing for motives
of many types. Many
theorists, hoping to
unravel
the complex nature of human motivation, have
suggested that all motives
are reducible to one
type,
e.g.,
a few basic drives, the
unconscious, or self-actualization. Being
a true eclectic, Allport felt
that there is
some
truth in all these
formulations of motivation, adding,
"Motives are so diverse in
type that we find it
difficult
to discover the common denominator"
(1961, p. 221). This, many
motivational concepts must
be
used
if we are to understand motivation.
Third, such a theory must
ascribe
dynamic force to the
individual's
cognitive
processes, especially
to the individual's long-range intentions
and plans. For Allport, the
most
significant
question one can as a person
in order to understand his or her
personality is "What do you
want
to
be doing five years from
now?" or "what are you
trying to do with your
life?" An adequate theory
of
motivation
must therefore address
itself to what sort of future a
person IS trying to bring
about. And fourth,
the
theory must allow
for the concrete uniqueness of motives.
In
contrast to theorists who assume
a
schedule
of motives common to all, Allport
insisted that the study of motivation
must focus on how
motives
function m unique ways m the individual
organism.
In
contrast to the "circular-feedback"
processes that characterize perseverative
autonomy, propriate
functional
autonomy refers to the
individual's acquired interests, values,
attitudes, and intentions.
Propriate
autonomy,
essential to the integration of adult
personality, significantly contributes to
the person's striving
for
a congruent self-image and an enriching
style of life. It is what
impels an individual to respond to
life's
challenges,
resulting in the attainment of
progressively higher levels of
authentic maturity and
growth.
Once
again, Allport proposed a concept
that is a precursor of much of
contemporary humanistic
thinking
about
human nature. For example, propriate
autonomy clearly suggests
that we need not be
constantly
rewarded
(reinforced) to sustain our
efforts:
Application:
The Study of
Values
Allport
stressed that a mature person
needs a unifying philosophy of
life to make sense of his or
her
existence.
An individual's philosophy is founded
upon values
basic
convictions about what is and is
not of
real
importance in life. Believing
that a person's efforts to
find order and meaning in
his or her existence are
governed
by values, Allport worked hard to
identify and measure basic
value dimensions. The success
of
his
effort is evident in the well-known
personality test that he
helped significantly to develop-the
Study
of
Values-which
was
originally published in 1931
and is currently in its
third edition (Allport,
Vernon, and
Lindzey,
1960). Within the context of
trait theory, this
instrument illustrates Allport's
ability to dissect an
enormously
complex component of personality (values)
into empirically measurable
terms.
Following
are Spranger's basic value
types, as depicted in the Study
of Values manual
(Allport, Vernon, and
Lindzey,
1960).
1-
The Theoretical:
The
theoretical person is primarily
concerned with the discovery of
truth.
He
or she assumes a
"cognitive"
attitude
in pursuing this objective, seeking
only to observe and to reason. In
doing so, the
theoretical
individual
searches for fundamental
identities and differences, rejecting
any considerations of beauty or
utility.
2-
The Economic:
The
economic individual places highest
value upon what is useful.
He
or she is thoroughly "practical"
and
conforms
closely to the stereotype of the successful
American businessperson. Rooted
originally in the
satisfaction
of bodily needs (self-preservation), the
economic value gradually extends to the
everyday
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affairs
of the business world-the production,
marketing, and consumption of goods, the
elaboration of
credit,
and the accumulation of tangible wealth.
The economic person is interested in
making money.
3-
The Aesthetic:
The
aesthetic person places
highest value on form
and
harmony.
Judging
each single experience from
the
standpoint
of grace, symmetry, or fitness, he or she
perceives life as a procession of events,
with each
individual
impression enjoyed for its
own sake. Such an individual
need not be a creative
artist but is
aesthetic
to the degree that his or her
chief interest is in the artistic
episodes of life.
4-
The Social:
The
highest value of the social type is
love
of people. Since the
Study
of Values focuses
only upon the
altruistic
or philanthropic aspects of love
(as opposed, for example, to
conjugal or familial love),
social
persons
prize others as ends and are
themselves kind, sympathetic, and
unselfish. Such a person is
likely to
experience
the theoretical, economic, and aesthetic
attitudes as cold and inhuman, regarding
love as the
only
suitable form of human relationship. In
its purest form, the social
attitude is selfless and is
closely
related
to the religious value.
5-
The Political:
The
dominant interest of the political
individual is power.
Vocational
activities of this type of
person are
not
necessarily confined to the realm of
politics, since leaders in
any field generally place a
high value on
power.
Because competition and struggle
are inherent in all life,
many philosophers have argued that
power
is
the most universal and fundamental human
motive. In fact, some of the
early writings of Alfred
Adler, as
you
may recall, reflect this
point of view. However, for
Spranger there are clear individual
differences in
the
power value. For certain
personalities, direct expression of this
motive overrides all others
in that they
yearn
for personal power, influence, and
renown above all
else.
6-
The Religious:
Religious
individuals place their highest
value upon unity.
Fundamentally
mystical, they seek to
understand
and
experience the world as a unified whole.
Spranger describes the religious person
as one who is
permanently
oriented toward the creation of the
highest and absolutely satisfying
value experience. There
are,
however, different modes of seeking
this level of experience. For
instance, some religious
persons are
"immanent
mystics," i.e., individuals
who find religious meaning
in the affirmation and active
participation
in
life, while others are
"transcendental mystics," striving to
unite themselves with a
higher reality by
withdrawing
from life, e.g., monks. Regardless of the
particular type of expression, the
religious person
basically
seeks unity and higher
meaning in the cosmos.
Summary
1-
Gordon Allport's trait
theory represents a blend of
humanistic and personalistic approaches
to the study
of
human behavior.
2-
Allport regarded the trait
as
the most valid unit of analysis
for understanding and studying
personality.
In
his system, traits are
predispositions to respond in an
equivalent manner to various
kinds of stimuli. In
short,
traits account for a person's
behavioral consistency over time and
across situations. They may
be
classified
under one of three headings- cardinal,
central, or secondary - according to
their degree of
pervasiveness
within a personality.
3-
The overall construct that
unifies traits and provides
direction for the person's
life is termed the
proprium.
This
concept essentially refers to the
"self-as-known," including all
aspects of personality
that
contribute
to an inward sense of
unity.
4-
Another of Allport's personality
concepts, his best-known and
most controversial, is that of
functional
autonomy.
This principle asserts that
adult motives are not
related to the earlier experiences in
which
appeared.
Allport further distinguished between
preservative functional autonomy
(reverberatory, or
feedback,
mechanism in the nervous system, and
Propriate functional autonomy
(the latter allows for
the
development
of the truly mature person.
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5-
One useful application of
Allport's theory, the Study
of Values, is a
self-report personality test.
Based
upon
Spranger's value types, it assesses the
relative strength of each of six
basic values in the
individual's
life:
theoretical, economic, aesthetic, social,
political, and religious.
Persons can be characterized by
their
dominant
value orientation or by their
particular patterns of values.
Example
we have used this scale
extensively with students and the values
of aesthetic, economic are there
in
females while social and
political are there in
males.
Evaluation
1-Allport's
profound disagreements with the
psychoanalytic and behavioral concepts of
human nature are
clearly
evident in his basic
assumptions.
2-While
trait theory has stimulated
almost no research to date in support of
its core constructs,
Allport
himself
made some interesting
empirical contributions to the
Personality literature.
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