Gordon Allport

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psychology of the individual

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psychology of the individual

Gordon Allport’s theory

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November 11, 1897 in Montezuma, Indiana, USA

Gordon Allport was born on

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Gordon Allport

  • His father was a physician and his mother was a teacher

  • He was the youngest among four bothers

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2nd

Allport ranked — amongst 100 high school graduates in his secondary s

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An Experimental Study of the Traits of Personality

his dissertation was entitled —

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American Psychological Association

Gordon Allport eventually became the president of the —

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personality

is the dynamic organization within the individual of those psychophysical systems that determine his unique adjustments to his environment.

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dynamic organization

Personality is constantly changing, although there is an organization/system that binds together the various components of the personality

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psychophysical

this notion entails the operation of both body and mind, fused together

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determine

  • Personality is made up of — tendencies that play an active role in the individual’s behavior.

  • Personality is something and does something.

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character

The notion of — implies some code of behavior in terms of which individuals and their acts are appraised/evaluated

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temperament

these are dispositions that are closely linked to biological or physiological determinants and that consequently show relative little modification with development

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trait

These are neuropsychic structure having the capacity to render many stimuli functionally equivalent, and to initiate and guide equivalent (meaningfully consistent) forms of adaptive and expressive behavior.

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personal dispostion

This is a neuropsychic structure peculiar to the individual having the capacity to render many stimuli functionally equivalent, and to initiate and guide equivalent (meaningfully consistent) forms of adaptive and stylistic behavior

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morphogenic traits

personal disposition is also called

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trait and personal disposition

  • These are loose tendencies, each expression of which is slightly different
    because it occurs in the face of different determining conditions. They are inferred from behavior, not directly observed.

  • Such inferences are based from frequency of the behavior, range of situations in which it arises, and the intensity of the behavior

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habit

  • are also determining tendencies but are less general than traits and personal dispositions.

  • Traits are often a combination of two or more —

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attitude

  • This is also a predisposition that can be unique, may initiate and guide behavior, and a product of genetic factors and learning.

  • It is linked to a specific object or class of objects.

  • It usually implies evaluation (acceptance of rejection) of the object toward which it is directed.

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types

are idealized constructions of the observer, and the individual can be fitted to them, but only at the loss of some distinctive identity

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cardinal disposition

  • These are very general dispositions, that almost every act of the person who possesses one seems traceable to its influence.

  • They dominate the personality, influencing almost everything a person does

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central disposition

These dispositions are highly characteristic of the individual

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secondary disposition

  • these dispositions are more limited in occurrence, and less crucial to a description of the personality,

  • They are responses to particular stimuli which occur on rare occasions

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proprium

  • is the region of the personality where we find the root of the consistency that marks attitudes, intentions, and evaluations.

  • It is not innate but develops in time

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self-identity, self-esteem, self- extension, sense of selfhood, rational thinking, self-image, cognitive style, function of knowing.

proprium is comprised of ego functions such as:

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  1. sense of self

  2. sense of continuing self-identity

  3. self-esteem or pride

  4. extension of the self

  5. self-image

  6. reason

  7. propriate strivings

Seven Aspects of The Self, and they constitute the proprium

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0-3 yrs old

The following Aspects of the Self are developed during this phase:
1. Sense of self
2. Sense of continuing self-identity
3. Self-esteem or pride

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4-9 yrs old

The following Aspects of the Self are developed during this phase:
1. Extension of the self
2. Self-image

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6-12 yrs old

The following Aspects of the Self are developed during this phase:
1. Awareness that it can cope with problems by means of reason

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Adolescence

The following Aspects of the Self are developed during this phase:
1. propriate strivings —Emergence of Intentions, long-range purposes, and distant goals

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maturity

entails increasing reliance on personal and/or internal standards of behavior

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Must Conscience

Childhood (0-3 yo): —-

- This involves internalization of parental and cultural rules

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should conscience

4-6 yo: —
- This is governed not by fear of punishment but by the positive structure of the propriate strivings.

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mature Generic Conscience

adult: (maturity)

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functional autonomy

  • The principle states that a given activity/behavior may become an end in itself in spite of the fact that it was originally engaged in some other reason.

  • This is the most controversial concept by Allport

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preservative functional autonomy

includes addictions, repetitious acts, and routines

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propriate functional autonomy

Refers to acquired interests, values, sentiments, intentions, master motives, personal dispositions, self-image, and lifestyle

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  1. principle or organizing the energy level

  2. principle of mastery and competence

  3. principle of propriate patterning

principles of origin of functional autonomy

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principle of organizing the energy level

  • Healthy people need activities to absorb the energy left over after their opportunistic needs have been gratified.

  • There must be motives to consume one’s available energies

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principle of mastery and competence

motives that lead to feelings of competence tend to become self-sustaining

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principle of propriate patterning

those motives most consistent with or expressive of the self becomes autonomous: the self-structure demands it

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infant

  • are creatures of heredity, primitive drives, and reflex existence.

  • they don’t have a personality yet, but may show some patterns that are the forerunners of subsequent personality.

  • They are persons of segmental tension and pleasure-pain feelings

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eclectic

on learning, Allport had an — approach:

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Conditioning, reinforcement theory, habit

are valid principles for animals, infants, and opportunistic learning

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propriate learning

Identification, closure, cognitive insight, self-image, and subsidiation to active ego systems are valid for

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adult

  • their most important motives are not echoes of the past but beckonings
    from the future.

  • However, not all — achieve full maturity

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the mature personality

  • possesses an Extension of the Self

  • A person should not be solely preoccupied with own needs.

  • should be able to participate in and enjoy many activities

  • Satisfaction and frustrations should be many and diverse

  • Has a unifying philosophy of life

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religion

philosophy of life —- s a good common source of this, but is not the only source

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idiographic

this is the research of the qualities of the individual

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morphogenic

idiographic was later changed into —

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nomothetic

this is the research for universal qualities among humans

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Windelband

Allport borrowed the terms from German philosopher —

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humanistic psychology

Allport’s theory has similarities to —, which states that human motives are not merely biological

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