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Personality Humanistic, Trait, Testing

Personality Humanistic, Trait, Testing. Humanistic Perspective By the 1950s and 60s psychology moves away from Freud’s negativity and the mechanistic

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Page 1: Personality Humanistic, Trait, Testing. Humanistic Perspective By the 1950s and 60s psychology moves away from Freud’s negativity and the mechanistic

PersonalityHumanistic, Trait, Testing

Page 2: Personality Humanistic, Trait, Testing. Humanistic Perspective By the 1950s and 60s psychology moves away from Freud’s negativity and the mechanistic

Humanistic PerspectiveBy the 1950s and 60s psychology moves away from Freud’s negativity and the mechanistic

psychology of the behaviorists.Abraham Maslow

(1908-1970)Carl Rogers(1902-1987)

Page 3: Personality Humanistic, Trait, Testing. Humanistic Perspective By the 1950s and 60s psychology moves away from Freud’s negativity and the mechanistic

Self-Actualizing PersonAbraham Maslow proposed that we as

individuals are motivated by a hierarchy of needs. Beginning with physiological needs, we

try to reach the state of self-actualization—fulfilling our potential.

Page 4: Personality Humanistic, Trait, Testing. Humanistic Perspective By the 1950s and 60s psychology moves away from Freud’s negativity and the mechanistic

Self Actualized people are self aware, self accepting, open and spontaneous, creative, loving and caring, and not paralyzed by other’s opinions.

“acquired enough courage to be unpopular, to be unashamed about being openly virtuous”

College students most likely to become self-actualized were “privately affectionate to those of their elders who deserve it.” and “secretly uneasy about the cruelty, meanness and mob spirit so often found in young people.”

Page 5: Personality Humanistic, Trait, Testing. Humanistic Perspective By the 1950s and 60s psychology moves away from Freud’s negativity and the mechanistic

Self Actualization

Maslow estimated only 1% of the population reaches this level

The top of the motivational hierarchy. This makes it the weakest of all needs and the most easily impeded.

“This inner nature is not strong and overpowering and unmistakable like the instincts of animals. It is weak and delicate and subtle and easily overcome by habit, cultural pressure, and wrong attitudes toward it.”

Jonah Complex – must be willing to sacrifice safety for personal growth. A fear of success.◦ We Run away from responsibilities, freedom,

Does society influence this? How does childhood influence this?

Page 6: Personality Humanistic, Trait, Testing. Humanistic Perspective By the 1950s and 60s psychology moves away from Freud’s negativity and the mechanistic

Examples of SA People

Pablo Casals Albert Einstein Ralph Waldo Emerson William James Thomas Jefferson Eleanor Roosevelt Albert Schweitzer

Page 7: Personality Humanistic, Trait, Testing. Humanistic Perspective By the 1950s and 60s psychology moves away from Freud’s negativity and the mechanistic

Assessment of Maslow

Original work has been interpreted multiple times, stemming away from his original ideas.

Some will state Maslow’s list of people is biased as he focused on what he thought represented the best of humans.◦Only those that had opportunity for success in

that setting, European, and men

Page 8: Personality Humanistic, Trait, Testing. Humanistic Perspective By the 1950s and 60s psychology moves away from Freud’s negativity and the mechanistic

Carl Rogers

Goal of every organism is to fulfill the capabilities of our genetic blueprint – actualizing tendency

Human beings form images of themselves – called self concepts (genuine, innate desires)

Drive to fulfill self-concepts – self actualizing tendency

Page 9: Personality Humanistic, Trait, Testing. Humanistic Perspective By the 1950s and 60s psychology moves away from Freud’s negativity and the mechanistic

Carl Rogers

Struggled to understand the unhappiness of the people he encountered in therapy.

The founder of personal growth and determination framework, which later leads to Positive and Motivational psychology.

Believed that we all have a potential for a fulfilling life if we remove the obstacles that keep us from reaching it.

Opposite of Freud’s world, which highlights our negative tendencies and compromises between impulses.

Page 10: Personality Humanistic, Trait, Testing. Humanistic Perspective By the 1950s and 60s psychology moves away from Freud’s negativity and the mechanistic

Perceived Self vs. Ideal Self

Did you write the same thing for each prompt?From a humanistic perspective, a fully

functioning, self-actualized person finds the perceived self as completely congruent with the ideal self.

Rogers suggests that if our self-concept is negative, that is, if we fall far short of our ideal self, we feel dissatisfied and unhappy. It follows that parents, teachers, and friends should help others know, accept, and be true to themselves

Page 11: Personality Humanistic, Trait, Testing. Humanistic Perspective By the 1950s and 60s psychology moves away from Freud’s negativity and the mechanistic

Assessing the Self

All of our thoughts and feelings about ourselves, in an answer to the question, “Who am I?” refers to Self-Concept.

In an effort to assess personality, Rogers asked people to describe themselves as they would like to be (ideal) and as they actually are (real). If the two descriptions were close the individual if a fully functioning person

Page 12: Personality Humanistic, Trait, Testing. Humanistic Perspective By the 1950s and 60s psychology moves away from Freud’s negativity and the mechanistic

Humanistic Personality Theories

Humanistic view asserts the fundamental goodness of people and their constant striving toward higher levels of functioning

Does not dwell on past occurrences, but rather focuses on the present and future

Page 13: Personality Humanistic, Trait, Testing. Humanistic Perspective By the 1950s and 60s psychology moves away from Freud’s negativity and the mechanistic

How to become fully functioning?Early Childhood Matters

People who are central to our lives condition us to move away from our genuine feelings, to earn their love by pursuing those goals they value, even if those do not reflect our deepest wishes.

Called Conditional positive reward (of worth)◦Acceptance and love contingent on certain behaviors

and fulfilling certain conditions.Need to strive for unconditional positive reward

◦Full acceptance and love of another regardless of our behavior Genuineness Accepting Empathy

Page 14: Personality Humanistic, Trait, Testing. Humanistic Perspective By the 1950s and 60s psychology moves away from Freud’s negativity and the mechanistic

Answer in your unit guide.

1. Who is your most significant other at this time?

2. Do you have unconditional positive regard (UPR) for this person? Explain.

3. Does this person have UPR for you? Explain.

4. Are there conditions of worth in your relationship? If so, what are they?

Page 15: Personality Humanistic, Trait, Testing. Humanistic Perspective By the 1950s and 60s psychology moves away from Freud’s negativity and the mechanistic

Evaluating the Humanistic Perspective

1. Humanistic psychology has a pervasive impact on counseling, education, child-rearing, and management.

2. Concepts in humanistic psychology are vague and subjective and lack scientific basis.

3. Some view these theories as overly optimistic and that they ignore the nature of human evil

4. Some argue that humanistic view lead to self-indulgence, narcissism and self-centeredness – Western view of hyper-individualism

Page 16: Personality Humanistic, Trait, Testing. Humanistic Perspective By the 1950s and 60s psychology moves away from Freud’s negativity and the mechanistic

Trait perspective

Page 17: Personality Humanistic, Trait, Testing. Humanistic Perspective By the 1950s and 60s psychology moves away from Freud’s negativity and the mechanistic

The Trait Perspective: Not Why but What

An individual’s unique makeup of durable dispositions and consistent ways of behaving

(traits) constitutes his or her personality.

Examples of Traits

HonestDependable

MoodyImpulsive

Page 18: Personality Humanistic, Trait, Testing. Humanistic Perspective By the 1950s and 60s psychology moves away from Freud’s negativity and the mechanistic

Gordon Allport

Founder of trait theory)Allport rejects the idea that the unconscious is central as

well as dismissing the negativity of psychodynamic theory.◦ “Are you that little boy.” Freud

Goal was to define personality in terms of identifiable behavior patterns

Description and classificationAllport & Odbert (1936), identified 18,000 words

representing traits. Cut this down to 200 – still too muchAllport believed if you want to know something about

someone, you just ask them.

Page 19: Personality Humanistic, Trait, Testing. Humanistic Perspective By the 1950s and 60s psychology moves away from Freud’s negativity and the mechanistic

Allport Continued

Each person has a unique capacity to adapt to the environment

Defined traits as mental structures that cause behavior to be similar across different situations◦Outgoing in the mall or in class

Page 20: Personality Humanistic, Trait, Testing. Humanistic Perspective By the 1950s and 60s psychology moves away from Freud’s negativity and the mechanistic

Exploring Traits

Factor analysis is a statistical approach

used to describe and relate

personality traits.

Cattell used this approach to develop a 16

Personality Factor (16PF) inventory.

Raymond Cattell(1905-1998)

Page 21: Personality Humanistic, Trait, Testing. Humanistic Perspective By the 1950s and 60s psychology moves away from Freud’s negativity and the mechanistic

Factor Analysis

Cattell found that large groups of traits could be reduced down to 16 core

personality traits based on statistical correlations.

Impulsive

Excitement

Imp

ati

en

t

Irritable

Boiste

rou

s

BasictraitSuperficial

traits

Page 22: Personality Humanistic, Trait, Testing. Humanistic Perspective By the 1950s and 60s psychology moves away from Freud’s negativity and the mechanistic

Personality DimensionsHans and Sybil Eysenck suggested that

personality could be reduced down to three polar dimensions, extraversion-introversion emotional

stability-instability, and pychoticism

Page 23: Personality Humanistic, Trait, Testing. Humanistic Perspective By the 1950s and 60s psychology moves away from Freud’s negativity and the mechanistic

The Big Five FactorsToday’s trait researchers believe that Eysencks’

personality dimensions are too narrow and Cattell’s 16PF too large. So, a middle range (five factors) of traits does a better job of assessment.

Openness/Culture

Conscientiousness

Extroversion/Introversion

Agreeableness

Neuroticism/ Emotional Stability

Page 24: Personality Humanistic, Trait, Testing. Humanistic Perspective By the 1950s and 60s psychology moves away from Freud’s negativity and the mechanistic

Endpoints

Page 25: Personality Humanistic, Trait, Testing. Humanistic Perspective By the 1950s and 60s psychology moves away from Freud’s negativity and the mechanistic

Questions about the Big Five

Yes. Conscientious people are morning type and extraverted are evening type.

4. Can they predict other personal attributes?

These traits are common across cultures.

3. How about other cultures?

Fifty percent or so for each trait.

2. How heritable are they?

Quite stable in adulthood. However, they change over development.

1. How stable are these traits?

Page 26: Personality Humanistic, Trait, Testing. Humanistic Perspective By the 1950s and 60s psychology moves away from Freud’s negativity and the mechanistic

Evaluating the Trait Perspective

The Person-Situation Controversy

Walter Mischel (2004) points out that traits may be enduring, but the resulting behavior in various situations is different. Therefore, traits

are not good predictors of behavior.

* Level of aggression is different based on environmental context

* She does A when X, but B when Y

Page 27: Personality Humanistic, Trait, Testing. Humanistic Perspective By the 1950s and 60s psychology moves away from Freud’s negativity and the mechanistic

The Person-Situation Controversy

Trait theorists argue that behaviors from a situation may be different, but average behavior

remains the same. Therefore, traits matter.