Abstract
Doubts are raised as to the extent of "applicability of the conceptualization that "personality" consists "of more or less stable internal factors that make one person's behavior consistent from one time to another, and different from the behavior other people would manifest in comparable situations". This is done by demonstrating the questionable validity of much of the extant empirical support for the "personality" concept. Respondents on interpersonal checklists, personality inventories and questionnaire interviews are shown to unwittingly sub stitute a theory of conceptual likenesses for a description of behavioral co-occurrences. Considerations about similarity are confounded with judgments about probability to such an extent that items alike in concept are inferred to be behaviorally characteristic of the same person even when, as is typically the case, conceptual relationships among items do not correspond to the actual behavioral relationships among items. Examined are extant "personality theories" having to do with children's social behavior, adult behavior in small groups, maternal socialization practices, and psychopathology. These "theories" are shown to be no more than statements about how respondents (and psychologists) classify things as alike in meaning.
Keywords
MeSH Terms
Affiliated Institutions
Related Publications
The Trait-Situation Controversy and the Concept of Interaction
The trait-situation issue has been reviewed, discussed, criticized, and "resolved" by several individuals within the last few years. Four recent contributors to this topic--Bowe...
Perceived Behavioral Control, Self‐Efficacy, Locus of Control, and the Theory of Planned Behavior<sup>1</sup>
Conceptual and methodological ambiguities surrounding the concept of perceived behavioral control are clarified. It is shown that perceived control over performance of a behavio...
Developing criteria for establishing interrater reliability of specific items: applications to assessment of adaptive behavior.
A set of criteria based upon biostatistical considerations for determining the interrater reliability of specific adaptive behavior items in a given setting was presented. The a...
Cross‐Cultural Testing of Three Social Cognitive Theories: An Application to Condom Use<sup>1</sup>
The aim of this study was to test the cross‐cultural validity of Fishbein and Ajzen's theory of reasoned action, Ajzen's theory of planned behavior, and Triandis' theory of inte...
Toward a Conceptualization of Impulsivity: Components across the Behavioral and Self-Report Domains
The components underlying items from a comprehensive but diverse domain of impulsivity measures were investigated. The disparity of items within this domain attests to the lack ...
Publication Info
- Year
- 1975
- Type
- article
- Volume
- 43
- Issue
- 3
- Pages
- 455-484
- Citations
- 245
- Access
- Closed
External Links
Social Impact
Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions
Citation Metrics
Cite This
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1111/j.1467-6494.1975.tb00716.x
- PMID
- 1185490