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Theories of Personality: Alfred Adler

Biography

  • Born on February 7, 1870 in Penzing, Austria

  • 2nd to 6 children, was raised in Vienna in the suburbs

  • Age of 5 developed pneumonia; this life threatening experience motivated Adler to pursue medicine

  • In 1895, received medical degree at University of Vienna; here he met a group of social students and his future wife, Raissa Timofeyewna Epstein, an intellect

  • Married in 1897 and had 4 children

  • He became a physician and had an office across from a circus in a lower-class part of Vienna

  • He later turned to psychiatry as it related to physical/mental disorders

  • In 1902, he met Freud and they formed the Vienna Psychoanalytic Society where Adler was the president

  • This led to Freud to claim Adler as a disciple

  • Founder of Individual Psychology

  • Passed away May 29, 1937 in Aberdeen, Scotland from a heart attack

  • Joined Freud’s discussion group in 1902

    • Adler’s views were initially compatible with Freud’s

  • Adler’s views changed and he began to criticize Freud’s theories

  • In 1911, Adler and 9 others broke away from Freud and formed “The Society for Individual Psychology”

  • Involvement in World War 1 helped develop the concept of social interest

Individual Psychology

  • Presents an optimistic view of a person resting heavily on social interest (feeling of oneness with all humankind)

Alfred Adler

  • Developed the approach of Individual Psychology

  • Contributions to understanding of personality

    • Notion of striving for superiority

    • Role of parental influence on personality development

    • Effects of birth order

FREUD

ADLER

Reduced all motivation to sex and aggression

Motivated by social influences and their striving for superiority and success

People have little or no choice in shaping their personality

People are responsible for who they are

Present behavior is shaped by past experiences

Present behavior is shaped by people’s view of the future

Put high emphasis on unconscious

Psychologically healthy people are aware of what they are doing and why they are doing it

  • Opposites do not contradict

  • Nature + nurture + creative power

  • Foundations for humanistic

  • Born with inferiority

  • Creative Power: you can choose who you want to be

  • Style of Life

    • Avoid -> avoid what is causing the inferiority

    • Dominant -> dominance over others

    • Getting -> dependence/relying on others

    • Parts of childhood experiences personality

    • We have to choose to change

Birth Order

  • First Born Children

    • Subjected to excessive attention from parents

    • Arrival of second child ends the pampering

    • Strong perception of inferiority

  • Middle-Born Children

    • Develop a strong superiority striving

    • Highest achievers

    • Try hard to catch up with their older siblings

  • Last Born Children

    • Pampered throughout their childhood

    • Vulnerable to strong inferiority feelings

6 Tenets of Adlerian Theory

  • Striving for Success/Superiority: the one dynamic force behind people’s behavior

  • People’s subjective perceptions shape their behavior and personality

  • Personality is unified and self-consistent

  • the value of all human activity must be seen from the viewpoint of social interest

  • The self consistent personality structure develops into a person’s style of life

  • The style of life is molded by people’s creative power

Striving for Success and Superiority

  • Reduced all motivation to a single drive

  • Everyone begins life with physical deficiencies that activate feelings of inferiority

  • Psychologically unhealthy - strive for personal superiority

  • Psychologically healthy - seek success for all humanity

The Striving Force as Compensation

  • People strive for superiority/success as a means of compensation for feelings of inferiority/weakness

  • The striving force is innate but its nature and direction are due to feelings of inferiority and to the goal of superiority

  • Without the innate movement toward perfection, children would never set goal of superiority/success

The Final Goal

  • Each person has the power to create a personalized fictional goal

    • Provided by heredity and environment

    • Product of creative power – ability to freely shape their behavior and create their own personality

    • The final goal reduces the pain of inferiority, feelings and points that person in the direction of either superiority/success

Subjective Perceptions

  • People strive for superiority/success to compensate for feelings of inferiority but the manner in which they strive is not shaped by reality but by their subjective perceptions of reality – their fictions/expectations of the future

Fictionalism

  • Our most important fiction is the goal of superiority/success – a goal we created early in life and may not clearly understand

  • This guides our style of life, gives unity to our personality

  • Fictions are ideas that have no real experience yet they influence people as if they really existed

    • Ex. Men are superior than women

    • Ex. Humans have freewill that enable them to make choices

    • Ex. God rewards good and punishes evil

  • A person’s image of ultimate fulfillment (e.g., money, admiration, health, etc.; in neurotics this goal is inflexible)

  • Adler’s teleological view of motivation (vs. Freud’s causality)

Personality is United and Self-Consistent

  • The term Individual Psychology

    • Each person is unique and indivisible

    • Becoming defensive against unpredictability

  • Ways in which the entire person operates with unity and self-consistency

    • Organ Dialect

      • All separate actions and functions can be understood only as parts of the goal

      • The disturbance of one part of the body cannot be viewed in isolation

      • The deficient organ expresses the direction of the individual’s goal

    • Conscious and Unconscious

      • The harmony between conscious and unconscious actions

      • The unconscious, part of the goal that is neither clearly formulated nor completely understood by the individual

Social Interest

  • Gemeinschaftsgefühl: German term for social interest

  • Social Interest

    • Attitude of relatedness with humanity as well as empathy for each member of the human community

    • Natural condition of the human species and the adhesive that binds society together

  • A person with well developed social interest strives not for personal superiority but for the perfection for all people in an ideal community

  • The natural inferiority of individuals necessitates their joining together to form a society

  • Social interest is a necessity for perpetuating the human species

    • Without protection and nourishment from a father/mother, a baby would perish

    • Without protection from the family/clan, our ancestors would have been destroyed by animals that were stronger

Mistaken Styles of Life

  • Ruling Type

    • Seek to dominate; may be antisocial/high achievers

    • Sense of aggression (masochism)

  • Getting Type

    • Dependent on others; may become depressed

    • Rely on others

    • Little effort to solve problems

  • Avoiding Type

    • Isolated and possibly cold

    • Molded by people’s creative power

      • You have a choice

      • Force your way through/adjust

Style of Life is Molded by People’s Creative Power

  • Creative Power

    • The freedom to create her/his own style of life

    • All people are responsible for who they are and how they behave

    • Way to solve problems

    • “The law of the low doorway” - bump or bend

      • Neuroticism

Abnormal Development

  • Neurosis: The Ruling Type

    • From childhood on, they are characterized by a tendency to be rather aggressive and dominant over others

    • The strength of their striving after personal power is so great that they tend to push over anything/anybody who gets in their way

    • The most energetic of them are bullies and sadists

    • Somewhat less energetic ones hurt others by hurting themselves, and include alcoholics, drug addicts, and suicides

  • Neurosis: The Getting Type

    • Relatively passive

    • Make little effort to solve their own problems

    • Instead, they rely on others to take care of them

    • Frequently use charm to persuade others to help them

  • Neurosis: The Avoiding Type

    • Have the lowest levels of energy and only survive by essentially avoiding life – especially other people

    • When pushed to the limits, they tend to become psychotic, retreating finally into their own personal worlds

  • Adler, like Freud, saw personality/lifestyle as something established quite early in life

  • Basic Childhood Situations that most contribute to a faulty lifestyle

  • Neurosis

    • People seen with exaggerated trait

    • Not normal but not clinically diagnosable

    • Childhood experiences that give rise to the personality

  1. Exaggerated physical deficiencies

  2. Pampered style of life

    • Spoiled; overdependent

  3. Neglected style of life

    • Exaggerate what’s going on

  • Exaggerated Physical Deficiencies

    • Must be accompanied by accentuated feelings of inferiority

    • They tend to be overly concerned with themselves

    • Lack consideration for others

    • Feel as if they are living in enemy country

    • Fear defeat more than they desire success

    • Life’s major problems can only be solved only in a selfish manner

  • Pampered Style of Life

    • The heart of most neuroses

    • Weak social interest but a strong desire to perpetuate the pampered

    • Parasitic relationship with one or both of their parents

    • Expect others to look after them, overprotect them, and satisfy their needs

    • Characterized by extreme discouragement, indecisiveness, oversensitivity, impatience, and exaggerated emotion, especially anxiety

  • Neglected Style of Life

    • Children who feel unloved and unwanted

    • Abused and mistreated children

    • Little confidence in themselves

    • Tend to overestimate difficulties connected with life’s major problems

    • Distrustful of other people and are unable to cooperate for the common welfare

    • Feel alienated from other people

    • More suspicious

Parental Influence on Personality Development

  • Parental behaviors that lead to problems in children’s life

  • Pampering

    • Robes the child of independence and adds to feelings of inferiority

  • Neglect

    • Children who receive little attention from their parents

    • Grow up cold and suspicious

    • Are incapable of warm personal relationships

S

Theories of Personality: Alfred Adler

Biography

  • Born on February 7, 1870 in Penzing, Austria

  • 2nd to 6 children, was raised in Vienna in the suburbs

  • Age of 5 developed pneumonia; this life threatening experience motivated Adler to pursue medicine

  • In 1895, received medical degree at University of Vienna; here he met a group of social students and his future wife, Raissa Timofeyewna Epstein, an intellect

  • Married in 1897 and had 4 children

  • He became a physician and had an office across from a circus in a lower-class part of Vienna

  • He later turned to psychiatry as it related to physical/mental disorders

  • In 1902, he met Freud and they formed the Vienna Psychoanalytic Society where Adler was the president

  • This led to Freud to claim Adler as a disciple

  • Founder of Individual Psychology

  • Passed away May 29, 1937 in Aberdeen, Scotland from a heart attack

  • Joined Freud’s discussion group in 1902

    • Adler’s views were initially compatible with Freud’s

  • Adler’s views changed and he began to criticize Freud’s theories

  • In 1911, Adler and 9 others broke away from Freud and formed “The Society for Individual Psychology”

  • Involvement in World War 1 helped develop the concept of social interest

Individual Psychology

  • Presents an optimistic view of a person resting heavily on social interest (feeling of oneness with all humankind)

Alfred Adler

  • Developed the approach of Individual Psychology

  • Contributions to understanding of personality

    • Notion of striving for superiority

    • Role of parental influence on personality development

    • Effects of birth order

FREUD

ADLER

Reduced all motivation to sex and aggression

Motivated by social influences and their striving for superiority and success

People have little or no choice in shaping their personality

People are responsible for who they are

Present behavior is shaped by past experiences

Present behavior is shaped by people’s view of the future

Put high emphasis on unconscious

Psychologically healthy people are aware of what they are doing and why they are doing it

  • Opposites do not contradict

  • Nature + nurture + creative power

  • Foundations for humanistic

  • Born with inferiority

  • Creative Power: you can choose who you want to be

  • Style of Life

    • Avoid -> avoid what is causing the inferiority

    • Dominant -> dominance over others

    • Getting -> dependence/relying on others

    • Parts of childhood experiences personality

    • We have to choose to change

Birth Order

  • First Born Children

    • Subjected to excessive attention from parents

    • Arrival of second child ends the pampering

    • Strong perception of inferiority

  • Middle-Born Children

    • Develop a strong superiority striving

    • Highest achievers

    • Try hard to catch up with their older siblings

  • Last Born Children

    • Pampered throughout their childhood

    • Vulnerable to strong inferiority feelings

6 Tenets of Adlerian Theory

  • Striving for Success/Superiority: the one dynamic force behind people’s behavior

  • People’s subjective perceptions shape their behavior and personality

  • Personality is unified and self-consistent

  • the value of all human activity must be seen from the viewpoint of social interest

  • The self consistent personality structure develops into a person’s style of life

  • The style of life is molded by people’s creative power

Striving for Success and Superiority

  • Reduced all motivation to a single drive

  • Everyone begins life with physical deficiencies that activate feelings of inferiority

  • Psychologically unhealthy - strive for personal superiority

  • Psychologically healthy - seek success for all humanity

The Striving Force as Compensation

  • People strive for superiority/success as a means of compensation for feelings of inferiority/weakness

  • The striving force is innate but its nature and direction are due to feelings of inferiority and to the goal of superiority

  • Without the innate movement toward perfection, children would never set goal of superiority/success

The Final Goal

  • Each person has the power to create a personalized fictional goal

    • Provided by heredity and environment

    • Product of creative power – ability to freely shape their behavior and create their own personality

    • The final goal reduces the pain of inferiority, feelings and points that person in the direction of either superiority/success

Subjective Perceptions

  • People strive for superiority/success to compensate for feelings of inferiority but the manner in which they strive is not shaped by reality but by their subjective perceptions of reality – their fictions/expectations of the future

Fictionalism

  • Our most important fiction is the goal of superiority/success – a goal we created early in life and may not clearly understand

  • This guides our style of life, gives unity to our personality

  • Fictions are ideas that have no real experience yet they influence people as if they really existed

    • Ex. Men are superior than women

    • Ex. Humans have freewill that enable them to make choices

    • Ex. God rewards good and punishes evil

  • A person’s image of ultimate fulfillment (e.g., money, admiration, health, etc.; in neurotics this goal is inflexible)

  • Adler’s teleological view of motivation (vs. Freud’s causality)

Personality is United and Self-Consistent

  • The term Individual Psychology

    • Each person is unique and indivisible

    • Becoming defensive against unpredictability

  • Ways in which the entire person operates with unity and self-consistency

    • Organ Dialect

      • All separate actions and functions can be understood only as parts of the goal

      • The disturbance of one part of the body cannot be viewed in isolation

      • The deficient organ expresses the direction of the individual’s goal

    • Conscious and Unconscious

      • The harmony between conscious and unconscious actions

      • The unconscious, part of the goal that is neither clearly formulated nor completely understood by the individual

Social Interest

  • Gemeinschaftsgefühl: German term for social interest

  • Social Interest

    • Attitude of relatedness with humanity as well as empathy for each member of the human community

    • Natural condition of the human species and the adhesive that binds society together

  • A person with well developed social interest strives not for personal superiority but for the perfection for all people in an ideal community

  • The natural inferiority of individuals necessitates their joining together to form a society

  • Social interest is a necessity for perpetuating the human species

    • Without protection and nourishment from a father/mother, a baby would perish

    • Without protection from the family/clan, our ancestors would have been destroyed by animals that were stronger

Mistaken Styles of Life

  • Ruling Type

    • Seek to dominate; may be antisocial/high achievers

    • Sense of aggression (masochism)

  • Getting Type

    • Dependent on others; may become depressed

    • Rely on others

    • Little effort to solve problems

  • Avoiding Type

    • Isolated and possibly cold

    • Molded by people’s creative power

      • You have a choice

      • Force your way through/adjust

Style of Life is Molded by People’s Creative Power

  • Creative Power

    • The freedom to create her/his own style of life

    • All people are responsible for who they are and how they behave

    • Way to solve problems

    • “The law of the low doorway” - bump or bend

      • Neuroticism

Abnormal Development

  • Neurosis: The Ruling Type

    • From childhood on, they are characterized by a tendency to be rather aggressive and dominant over others

    • The strength of their striving after personal power is so great that they tend to push over anything/anybody who gets in their way

    • The most energetic of them are bullies and sadists

    • Somewhat less energetic ones hurt others by hurting themselves, and include alcoholics, drug addicts, and suicides

  • Neurosis: The Getting Type

    • Relatively passive

    • Make little effort to solve their own problems

    • Instead, they rely on others to take care of them

    • Frequently use charm to persuade others to help them

  • Neurosis: The Avoiding Type

    • Have the lowest levels of energy and only survive by essentially avoiding life – especially other people

    • When pushed to the limits, they tend to become psychotic, retreating finally into their own personal worlds

  • Adler, like Freud, saw personality/lifestyle as something established quite early in life

  • Basic Childhood Situations that most contribute to a faulty lifestyle

  • Neurosis

    • People seen with exaggerated trait

    • Not normal but not clinically diagnosable

    • Childhood experiences that give rise to the personality

  1. Exaggerated physical deficiencies

  2. Pampered style of life

    • Spoiled; overdependent

  3. Neglected style of life

    • Exaggerate what’s going on

  • Exaggerated Physical Deficiencies

    • Must be accompanied by accentuated feelings of inferiority

    • They tend to be overly concerned with themselves

    • Lack consideration for others

    • Feel as if they are living in enemy country

    • Fear defeat more than they desire success

    • Life’s major problems can only be solved only in a selfish manner

  • Pampered Style of Life

    • The heart of most neuroses

    • Weak social interest but a strong desire to perpetuate the pampered

    • Parasitic relationship with one or both of their parents

    • Expect others to look after them, overprotect them, and satisfy their needs

    • Characterized by extreme discouragement, indecisiveness, oversensitivity, impatience, and exaggerated emotion, especially anxiety

  • Neglected Style of Life

    • Children who feel unloved and unwanted

    • Abused and mistreated children

    • Little confidence in themselves

    • Tend to overestimate difficulties connected with life’s major problems

    • Distrustful of other people and are unable to cooperate for the common welfare

    • Feel alienated from other people

    • More suspicious

Parental Influence on Personality Development

  • Parental behaviors that lead to problems in children’s life

  • Pampering

    • Robes the child of independence and adds to feelings of inferiority

  • Neglect

    • Children who receive little attention from their parents

    • Grow up cold and suspicious

    • Are incapable of warm personal relationships