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CONTENTS
|What is personality|Meaning|History & Origin of the Personality Theory|Theories of Personality|Conclusion|
 

Yoga Psychology - 4

Personality

अन्य लिंक :|Mental Health | मानसिक स्वास्थ्य में योग की भूमिका| मन एवं शरीर का सम्बन्ध| Personality|स्व सन्तुष्टि|शान्ति|

What is personality

Introduction 

  A characteristic way of thinking, feeling, and behaving.

 Personality embraces moods, attitudes, and opinions and is most clearly expressed in interactions with other people. It includes behavioral characteristics, both inherent and acquired, that distinguish one person from another and that can be observed in people's relations to the environment and to the social group.

Meaning

Etymology –                         Latin  -            personalitas,

 Meaning (s) :

1.      The quality or fact of being a person as distinct from a thing or animal; the quality which makes a being a person.  

2.      The assemblage of qualities or characteristics which makes a person a distinctive individual; the (esp. notable or appealing) distinctive character of a person.

3.      A person, esp. one of unusual character. Now chiefly spec., an important or famous person; a celebrity.

History & Origin of the Personality Theory

History of Personality Studies

Personality as a separate discipline within psychology may be said to have begun in the 1930s with the publication in the United States of two textbooks,

Origin of the Personality Theory :

The study of personality can be said to have its origins in the fundamental idea that people are distinguished by their characteristic individual patterns of behaviour—the distinctive ways in which they walk, talk, furnish their living quarters, or express their urges.

The systematic psychological study of personality has emerged from a number of different sources, including psychiatric case studies that focused on lives in distress, from philosophy, which explores the nature of man, and from physiology, anthropology, and social psychology.

Personologist - A person who studies personality

 

Theories of Personality

 
 

 (A) Physiological Theory 

Humoral Theories 

Perhaps the oldest personality theory known is contained in the cosmological writings of the Greek philosopher and physiologist  Empedocles and in related speculations of the physician Hippocrates. Empedocles' cosmic elements—air (with its associated qualities, warm and moist), earth (cold and dry), fire (warm and dry), and water (cold and moist)—were related to health and corresponded (in the above order) to  Hippocrates' physical  humours, which were associated with variations in temperament: blood (sanguine temperament), black bile (melancholic), yellow bile (choleric), and phlegm (phlegmatic). This theory, with its view that body chemistry determines temperament, has survived in some form for more than 2,500 years. According to these early theorists, emotional stability as well as general health depend on anappropriate balance among the four bodily humours; an excess of one may produce a particular bodily illness or an exaggerated personality trait. Thus, a person with an excess of blood would be expected to have a sanguine temperament—that is, to be optimistic, enthusiastic, and excitable. Too much black bile (dark blood perhaps mixed with other secretions) was believed to produce a melancholic temperament. An oversupply of yellow bile (secreted by the liver) would result in anger, irritability, and a “jaundiced” view of life. An abundance of phlegm (secreted in the respiratory passages) was alleged to make people stolid, apathetic, and undemonstrative. As biological science has progressed, these primitive ideas about body chemistry have been replacedby more complex ideas and by contemporary studies of hormones, neurotransmitters, and substances produced within the central nervous system, such as endorphins.

Humor (from Latin “liquid,” or “fluid”), in early Western physiological theory, one of the four fluids of the body that were thought to determine a person's temperament and features. In the ancient physiological theory still current in the European Middle Ages and later, the four cardinal humours were  blood, phlegm, choler (yellow bile), and melancholy (black bile); the variant mixtures of these humours in different persons determined their “complexions,” or “temperaments,” their physical and mental qualities, and their dispositions. The ideal person had the ideally proportioned mixture of the four; a predominance of one produced a person who was sanguine (Latin sanguis, “blood”), phlegmatic, choleric, or melancholic. Each complexion had specific characteristics, and the words carried much weight that they have since lost: e.g., the choleric man was not only quick to anger but also yellow-faced, lean, hairy, proud, ambitious, revengeful, and shrewd. By extension, “humour” in the 16th century came to denote an unbalancedmental condition, a mood or unreasonable caprice, or a fixed folly or vice.

 

(B) Morphological (body type) Theories :

Morphological theory defines distinguish types of personalities on the basis of body shape ( somatotype).

This theory was developed by the German psychiatrist  Ernst Kretschmer.

Book - Physique and Character (1921),

Some Points :

1.      a frail, rather weak (asthenic) body build as well as a muscular (athletic) physique were frequently characteristic of schizophrenic patients,

2.      a short, rotund (pyknic) build was often found among manic-depressive

3.      Slim and delicate physiques are associated with introversion,

4.      Rounded heavier and shorter bodies tend to be cyclothymic—that is, moody but often extroverted and jovial.

 

(C) Psychoanalytic theories

Freud -             Austrian neurologist  Sigmund Freud

Beginnings were based in studies of psychopathology, psychoanalysis became a more general perspective on normal personality development and functioning. The field of investigation began with case studies of so-called  neurotic conditions, which included hysteria, obsessive-compulsive disorders, and phobic conditions.

Key Terms -  defense mechanisms, obsessive-compulsive condition,.

 To Freud the fantasies were the mental representations of basic  drives, among which sex, aggression, and self-preservation were paramount. These drives, moreover, required taming as the child matured into an adult, projection,

Jung -    The Swiss psychiatrist  Carl Gustav Jung,

               Modulating basic drives - introversion and extroversion. 

Introversion was defined as preoccupation with one's inner world at the expense of social interactions and  extroversion as a preference for social interplay for living out inner drives (collectively termed libido).

Adler -  The Austrian psychiatrist  Alfred Adler,

       Coping Strategy - people compensated for a behavioral deficiency by exaggerating some other behaviour: a process analogous to organic processes called hypertrophy, in which, for example, if one eye is injured, the other eye may compensate by becoming more acute. In Adler's view, a person with a feeling of inferiority related to a physical or mental inadequacy would also develop compensating behaviours or symptoms, e.g. shortness of stature could lead to the development of domineering, controlling behaviours.

(D) Trait theories

In the 1940s many investigators focused on intensive studies of individual traits and of combinations of traits that seemed to define personality types, such as the “authoritarian personality.” Others studied the characteristic presence of certain needs such as the need for achievement or affiliation. The method used to measure these needs was to examine the fantasy productions of Murray's Thematic Apperception Test (TAT) and to relate the motive score to other behavioral indexes such as personal history, occupational choice, speed of learning, and persistence of behaviour following failure.

Traits Taken For Study - Traits such as sociability, impulsiveness, meticulousness, truthfulness etc. traits represent structures or habits within a person and are not the construction of observers; they are the product of both genetic predispositions and experience. It can be generally stated that traits are merely names for observed regularities in behaviour, but do not explain them

 

Trait names have further been reduced to three higher-order factors —introversion–extroversion, neuroticism, and psychoticism—and some psychologists have attempted to explore the biological roots of each factor.

 
 

Modern trends in personality studies

 
 

(E) Modern trends in personality studies

(i) Sex differences -

1.      Girls generally begin to speak earlier than boys and have fewer language problems in school and in the course of maturation.

2.      females do better than males on verbal tasks.

3.      Males generally exhibit greater skill in understanding spatial relations and in solving problems that involve mathematical reasoning.

4.      Beginning at the toddler stage, the activity level of males is generally higher than that of females.

5.      Boys are more likely to be irritable and aggressive than girls and more often behave like bullies.

6.      Men usually outscore women in antisocial personality disorders, which consist of persistent lying, stealing, vandalism, and fighting, although these differences do not appear until after about the age of three.

 

A study by the American anthropologists Beatrice B. Whiting and Carolyn P. Edwards found that males were consistently more aggressive than females in seven cultures, suggesting that there is a predisposition in males to respond aggressively to provocative situations, although how and whether the attacking response occurs depends on the social and cultural setting.

Genetic aspects

In systematic studies of humans, studies of twins and adopted children have been used to try to evaluate environmental and genetic factors as determinants of a number of behaviour patterns. These studies have shown that genetic factors account for about 50 percent of the range of differences found in a given population. Most of the remaining differences are attributable not to the environment that is common to members of a family but to the environment that is unique to each member of the family or that results from interactions of family members with one another. In the United States,  behaviour geneticists such as Robert Plomin report that, in behaviours describable as sociability, impulsiveness, altruism, aggression, and emotional sensitivity, the similarities among monozygotic (identical) twins is twice that among dizygotic (fraternal) twins, with the common environment contributing practically nothing to the similarities. Similar findings are reported for twins reared together or separately.

 
 

Conclusion

 
 

 

In general, information about human personality has come from three different sources of study. The first is biological, conceived to have genetic as well as environmental origins. The second is that of the social realm, including the impact of social forces on the growing child that shape such personal responses as motives, traits, behaviours, and attitudes. The third is the examination of clinical contacts with people who have suffered adaptive and adjustive failures. Some authorities have suggested that a greater degree of integration of all three sources of information and the methods derived from them would accelerate the growth of valid information about personality.

 
     
 
 

Authored & Developed By               Dr. Sushim Dubey

&दार्शनिक-साहित्यिक अनुसंधान                      ?  डॉ.सुशिम दुबे,                             G    Yoga

Dr. Sushim Dubey

® This study material is based on the courses  taught by Dr. Sushim Dubey to the Students of M.A. (Yoga) Rani Durgavati University, Jabalpur  and the Students of Diploma in Yoga Studies/Therapy of  Morarji Desai National Institute of Yoga, New Delhi, during 2005-2008 © All rights reserved.