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Chapter 15.

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1 Chapter 15

2 Partner Work 100 points List 5 personality traits you have
Check mark positive traits Minus sign negative traits Up arrow high energy traits Down arrow low energy traits Have partner list a trait not on your list they see as a personality trait for you

3 What is in this chapter? The Objectives for this chapter are to explore the following concepts: What is personality? Is personality unconscious or conscious? Is personality something that we work at? How do we determine someone’s personality? Can horoscopes predict personality? Do our friends influence our personality? In the future can we create more positive personalities in our communities?

4 What is Personality? Personality
an individual’s characteristic pattern of thinking, feeling, and acting aka…temporal consistency basic perspectives Psychoanalytic Humanistic Trait

5 Personality Development

6 The Psychoanalytic Perspective
Freud’s theory proposed that childhood sexuality and unconscious motivations influence personality Biology determines personality development

7 The Psychoanalytic Perspective
Psychoanalysis: theory & techniques of Freud Psychodynamic perspective Freud’s theory of personality that attributes our thoughts and actions to unconscious motives and conflicts techniques used in treating psychological disorders by seeking to expose and interpret unconscious tensions

8 Psychodynamic Personality Structure
Preconscious: temporary storage region of items typically in the unconscious so we can bring them into conscious awareness; Ex. Forgotten memories that we can easily recall Unconscious: region containing our thoughts, wishes, feelings, memories of which we are unaware Divided into 3 parts:1. Id 2. Ego 3. Superego

9 Personality Structure
Id Superego Ego Conscious mind Unconscious mind Freud’s idea of the mind’s structure

10 The Psychoanalytic Perspective
Central technique used in Psychoanalysis Dream Analysis: is the “Royal Road” to the unconscious Free Association a method of exploring the unconscious (the majority of the mind that lies below the water as an iceberg) person relaxes and says whatever comes to mind, no matter how trivial or embarrassing

11 Psychodynamic Personality Structure
Id: basic drives to survive, reproduce, and aggress Acts on the pleasure principle: seeking immediate gratification Ego: partly contains our conscious perceptions, thoughts, judgments, & memories; mediates btwn the id & superego act on the reality principle: seeks to gratify the id’s impulses in REALISTIC ways that will bring long-term please rather than pain or destruction Superego: Our sense of right and wrong and considers the IDEAL; strives for perfection and judges actions leading to pride or guilt; what people OUGHT to do

12 The Relationship among Id, Ego and Superego
A pleasure seeking person dominated by the Id A guilt-ridden person dominated by the Superego A psychologically healthy person dominated by the Ego

13 Freud’s Psychosexual Instinct Theory of Personality and of Human Development
Freud: “Sexual anatomy/biology is destiny”. The “fuels” of human motivational development and human personality: Eros -- the life force. Thanatos -- the death force. Libido -- the sex drive that fuels eros. Erogenous zones-- sensitive body areas

14 Personality Development
Freud’s Psychosexual Stages Stage Focus Oral Pleasure centers on the mouth-- (0-18 months) sucking, biting, chewing Anal Pleasure focuses on bowel and bladder (18-36 months) elimination; coping with demands for control Phallic Pleasure zone is the genitals; coping with (3-6 years) incestuous sexual feelings Latency Dormant sexual feelings (6 to puberty) Genital Maturation of sexual interests (puberty on)

15 Psychosexual Personality Development
1. Oral Stage (Age ) Erogenous Zone in Focus: Mouth Gratifying Activities: Nursing - eating, as well as mouth movement, including sucking, gumming, biting and swallowing.

16 Personality Development Key Concepts
Identification How we develop our personality children incorporate their parents’ values into their developing superegos Fixation a lingering focus of pleasure-seeking energies at an earlier psychosexual stage, where conflicts were unresolved

17 Psychosexual Personality Development
Interaction with the Environment: To the infant, the mother's breast not only is the source of food and drink, but also represents her love. Because the child's personality is controlled by the id and therefore demands immediate gratification, responsive nurturing is key. Both insufficient and forceful feeding can result in fixation in this stage.

18 Symptoms of Oral Fixation:
Smoking Constant chewing on gum, pens, pencils, etc. Nail biting Overeating Drinking Sarcasm ("the biting personality") and verbal hostility

19 Psychosexual Personality Development
2. Anal Stage (Age ) Erogenous Zone in Focus: Anus Gratifying Activities: Bowel movement and the withholding of such movement

20 Interaction with the Environment:
The major event at this stage is toilet training, a process through which children are taught when, where, and how excretion is deemed appropriate by society. Children at this stage start to notice the pleasure and displeasure associated with bowel movements. Through toilet training, they also discover their own ability to control such movements. Along with it comes the realization that this ability gives them power over their parents. That is, by exercising control over the retention and expulsion of feces, a child can choose to either grant or resist parents' wishes.

21 Anal-Expulsive Personality:
Anal Fixation Anal-Expulsive Personality: If the parents are too lenient and fail to instill the society's rules about bowel movement control, the child will derive pleasure and success from the expulsion. Individuals with a fixation on this mode of gratification are excessively sloppy, disorganized, reckless, careless, and defiant.

22 Anal-Retentive Personality:
If a child receives excessive pressure and punishment from parents during toilet training, he will experience anxiety over bowl movements and take pleasure in being able to withhold such functions. Individuals who fail to progress pass this stage or are FIXATED at this stage are obsessively clean and orderly, and intolerant of those who aren't. They may also be very careful, stingy, withholding, obstinate, meticulous, conforming and passive-aggressive.

23 3. Phallic Stage (Age 4 - 5) Erogenous Zone in Focus: Genital
Gratifying Activities: genital fondling and exploration Self love

24 Interaction with the Environment:
Probably the most challenging stage in a person's psychosexual development. The key event at this stage is the child's subconscious feeling of romantic attraction toward the parent of the opposite sex, together with jealousy and fear of the same-sex parent.

25 In boys, this situation is called the "Oedipus Complex" (aka the Oedipal Complex), named after the young man in a Greek myth who killed his father and married his mother, unaware of their true identities.

26 Boys, in the midst of their Oedipus Complex, often experience intense "castration anxiety", which comes from the fear of punishment from the father for their desire for the mother.

27 In girls, it is called the "Electra Complex".
Girls' Electra Complex involves "penis envy". the girl believes that she once had a penis but that it was removed. In order to compensate for its loss, the girl wants to have a child by her father.

28 Success or failure in the Oedipus conflict is at the core of either normal psychological development or psychological disorder. If a child is able to successfully resolve the conflict, he or she will have learned to control their envy and hostility and begin to identify with and model after the parent of their own sex. and are ready to move on to the next developmental stage.

29 Phallic Fixation: For men: Anxiety and guilty feelings about sex, fear of castration, and narcissistic personality. For women: It is implied that women never progress past this stage fully and will always maintain a sense of envy and inferiority

30 4. Latency (Age 5 - puberty)
Erogenous Zone in Focus: None Interactions with the Environment: This is a period during which sexual feelings are suppressed to allow children to focus their energy on other aspects of life. This is a time of learning, adjusting to the social environment outside of home, absorbing the culture, forming beliefs and values, developing same-sex friendships, engaging in sports, etc Lasts five to six years, until puberty, upon which children become capable of reproduction, and sexuality is re-awakened.

31 5. Genital Stage (From puberty on)
Erogenous Zone in Focus: Genital Gratifying Activities: genital stimulation and heterosexual relationships Interaction with the Environment: This stage is marked by a renewed sexual interest and desire, and the pursuit of relationships. Fixations: This stage does not cause any fixation. According to Freud, if people experience difficulties at this stage, and many people do, the damage was done in earlier oral, anal, and phallic stages. These people come into this last stage of development with fixations from earlier stages. Attractions to the opposite sex can be a source of anxiety at this stage if the person has not successfully resolved the Oedipal (or Electra) conflict at the phallic stage.

32 Freudian:Defense Mechanisms
the ego’s protective methods of reducing anxiety by preventing threatening impulses from being consciously recognized and unconsciously distorting reality Repression the basic defense mechanism that banishes anxiety-arousing thoughts, feelings, and memories from consciousness Underlies all other defense mechanisms If incomplete, memories show in our dreams & slips of the tongue

33 Defense Mechanisms Regression
defense mechanism in which an individual faced with anxiety retreats to a more infantile psychosexual stage, where some psychic energy remains fixated An excessive fixation contributes to this Ex. Baby talk or bedwetting of older sibling upon the arrival of a new infant; thumb-sucking once in school

34 Defense Mechanisms Reaction Formation
defense mechanism by which the ego unconsciously switches unacceptable impulses into their opposites people may express feelings that are the opposite of their anxiety-arousing unconscious feelings Ex. Overly protective parents

35 Defense Mechanisms Projection Rationalization
defense mechanism by which people disguise their own threatening impulses by attributing them to others Rationalization defense mechanism that offers self-justifying explanations in place of the real, more threatening, unconscious reasons for one’s actions

36 Defense Mechanisms Displacement
defense mechanism that shifts sexual or aggressive impulses toward a more acceptable or less threatening object or person as when redirecting anger toward a safer outlet

37 Defense Mechanisms cont.
Denial :The process of refusing to admit that there is a problem Sublimination: The process of channeling emotional energy into constructive or creative activities

38 Assessing the Unconscious
Projective Test a personality test, such as the Rorschach or TAT, that provides ambiguous stimuli designed to trigger projection of one’s inner dynamics Most aligned with the psychoanalytic perspective Ex. House-Tree-Person, Draw-A-Person, & Incomplete Sentence tests Thematic Apperception Test (TAT) a projective test in which people express their inner feelings and interests through the stories they make up about ambiguous scenes Developed by Henry Murray

39 Assessing the Unconscious--TAT

40 Questions to Ask 1. What event(s) led up to this moment?
2. What is happening right now? 3. What is the subject(s) thinking or feeling? 4. What do you think will be the outcome or resolution?

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47 Assessing the Unconscious
Rorschach Inkblot Test the most widely used projective test a set of 10 inkblots designed by Hermann Rorschach seeks to identify people’s inner feelings by analyzing their interpretations of the blots

48 Assessing the Unconscious--Rorschach

49 Questions to Ask 1. What do you see?
2. What determined it; color, shape, texture, shading? 3. is it positive or negative? 4. moving or still 5. how clear/vague? 6. category; human, sexual, animal, fantasy, inanimate, nature, other.

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57 Criticisms of Projective Tests
Rorschach No universally accepted system for scoring and interpretation It would diagnose many normal adults as “strikingly pathological” Overall, projective tests are not very reliable or valid; yet many still use them along with other types of assessments of personality and emotional/behavioral conditions

58 Neo (new)-Freudians Friends and aspiring colleagues who worked closely with Freud, but began to stray from complete adherence to his perspective Agreed with: Structure of personality and importance of unconscious Shaping of personality in childhood (but more social not sexual) Anxiety Defense mechanisms

59 Neo (new)-Freudians Disagreed with:
Lack of consciousness in interpreting experiences and coping with the environment Doubted the sex and aggression were the all-consuming motivations Placed greater emphasis on motives and social interactions

60 Neo (new)-Freudians Alfred Adler Karen Horney Carl Jung
importance of childhood social tension Karen Horney sought to balance Freud’s masculine biases Challenges Freud’s perspective the women have weak superegos Carl Jung emphasized the collective unconscious concept of a shared, inherited reservoir of memory traces from our species’ history

61 Alfred Adler striving for perfection a single "drive" or motivating force behind all our behavior and experience is the drive for perfection or superiority aggression drive: the reaction we have when other drives, such as our need to eat, be sexually satisfied, get things done, or be loved, are frustrated. Compensation: striving to overcome since we all have problems, short-comings, inferiorities of one sort or another…aka. these people suffer from feelings of inferiority masculine protest: Boys are held in higher esteem than girls. Therefore lower self-esteem in women Childhood birth order plays into personality as well

62 Karen Horney People feel most helpless, anxious and lost in life around the issues of getting enough love. Dealing with impulses less important than coping with the stress of meeting our social needs. We build our personality around fighting rejection that explains why we go along with people even when we don’t want to. Giving in to Peer pressure to gain acceptance.

63 Carl Jung two dimensions in the unconscious— 1. the personal and 2. Archetypes of a collective unconscious: the common reservoir of images derived from our species universal experiences (we inherit a need to be loved, accepted, need spirituality) developed the concepts of extroversion and introversion for the study of personality types, from which the Myers-Briggs Personality Indicator was developed the most important and lifelong task: individuation: achievement of harmony of conscious and unconscious, which makes a person one and whole.

64 Humanistic Perspective
Abraham Maslow ( ) studied self-actualization processes of productive and healthy people compared to Freud’s “sick” people

65 Humanistic Perspective
Believes that people are basically good Self-Actualization the ultimate psychological need that arises after basic physical and psychological needs are met and self-esteem is achieved Self-determination plays a key role in this process and involves the motivation to fulfill one’s potential

66 Humanistic Perspective
Carl Rogers ( ) focused on growth and fulfillment of individuals which required interactions with people of genuineness acceptance empathy

67 Humanistic Perspective cont. Carl Rogers
Unconditional Positive Regard an attitude of total acceptance toward another person; When we accept others, we can accept ourselves. Self-Concept all our thoughts and feelings about ourselves, in an answer to the question, “Who am I?” Social self: who we should be Real self: who we are Ideal self: who we want to be Incongruence: when they are misaligned

68 Humanistic Perspective
Criticized by Others: For underestimating the role of social influence on individual’s personalities Concepts are vague and not empirically supported Not recognizing fundamental evil of man Criticized Others: Traditional personality tests for not considering the unique subjective experience of the individual personality

69 Contemporary Research-- The Trait Perspective
a characteristic pattern of behavior & motivation a disposition to feel and act, as assessed by self-report inventories and peer reports Personality Inventory a questionnaire (often with true-false or agree-disagree items) on which people respond to items designed to gauge a wide range of feelings and behaviors used to assess selected personality traits

70 The Four Basic Personality Types

71 The Trait Perspective UNSTABLE STABLE choleric melancholic phlegmatic sanguine INTROVERTED EXTRAVERTED Moody Anxious Rigid Sober Pessimistic Reserved Unsociable Quiet Sociable Outgoing Talkative Responsive Easygoing Lively Carefree Leadership Passive Careful Thoughtful Peaceful Controlled Reliable Even-tempered Calm Touchy Restless Aggressive Excitable Changeable Impulsive Optimistic Active Hans and Sybil Eysenck use two primary personality factors as axes for describing personality variation

72 Strengths of a Melancholy The Introvert | The Thinker | The Pessimist
The Melancholy At Work Schedule oriented Perfectionist, high standards Detail conscious Persistent and thorough Orderly and organized Neat and tidy Economical Sees the problems Finds creative solutions Needs to finish what he starts Likes charts, graphs, figures, lists The Melancholy As a Friend Makes friends cautiously Content to stay in background Avoids causing attention Faithful and devoted Will listen to complaints Can solve other's problems Deep concern for other people Moved to tears with compassion Seeks ideal mate The Melancholy's Emotions Deep and thoughtful Analytical Serious and purposeful Genius prone Talented and creative Artistic or musical Philosophical and poetic appreciative of beauty Sensitive to others Self-sacrificing Conscientious Idealistic The Melancholy As A Parent Sets high standards Wants everything done right Keeps home in good order Picks up after children Sacrifices own will for others Encourages scholarship and talent

73 Weakness of a Melancholy The Introvert | The Thinker | The Pessimist
The Melancholy At Work Not people oriented depressed over imperfections Chooses difficult work Hesitant to start projects Spends to much time planning Prefers analysis to work Self-deprecating Hard to please Standards often to high Deep need for approval The Melancholy As a Friend Lives through others Insecure socially Withdrawn and remote critical of others Holds back affections Dislikes those in opposition Suspicious of people Antagonistic and vengeful Unforgiving Full of contradictions Skeptical of compliments The Melancholy's Emotions Remembers the negatives Moody and depressed Enjoys being hurt Has false humility Off in another world Low self-image Has selective hearing Self-centered Too introspective Guilt feelings Persecution complex Tends to hypochondria The Melancholy As A Parent Puts goals beyond reach May discourage children May be too meticulous Becomes martyr Sulks over disagreements Puts guilt upon children

74 Strengths of a Phlegmatic
The Phlegmatic's Emotions Low-key personality Easygoing and relaxed Calm, cool and collected Patient well balanced Consistent life Quiet but witty Sympathetic and kind Keeps emotions hidden Happily reconciled to life All-purpose person The Phlegmatic As A Parent Makes a good parent Takes time for the children Is not in a hurry Can take the good with the bad Doesn't get upset easily The Phlegmatic At Work Competent and steady Peaceful and agreeable Has administrative ability Mediates problems Avoids conflicts Good under pressure Finds the easy way The Phlegmatic As a Friend Easy to get along with Pleasant and enjoyable Inoffensive Good listener Dry sense of humor Enjoys watching people Has many friends Has compassion and concern

75 The Introvert | The Watcher | The Pessimist
The Phlegmatic The Introvert | The Watcher | The Pessimist The Phlegmatic's Emotions Unenthusiastic Fearful and worried Indecisive Avoids responsibility Quiet will of iron Selfish To shy and reticent Too compromising Self-righteous The Phlegmatic As A Parent Lax on discipline Doesn't organize home Takes life too easy The Phlegmatic At Work Not goal oriented Lacks self motivation Hard to get moving Resents being pushed Lazy and careless Discourages others Would rather watch The Phlegmatic As a Friend Dampens enthusiasm Stays uninvolved Is not exciting Indifferent to plans Judges others Sarcastic and teasing Resists change

76 Strengths of a Choleric The Extrovert | The Doer | The Optimist
The Choleric's Emotions Born leader Dynamic and active Compulsive need for change Must correct wrongs Strong-willed and decisive Unemotional Not easily discouraged Independent and self sufficient Exudes confidence Can run anything The Choleric As A Parent Exerts sound leadership Establishes Goals Motivates family to action Knows the right answer Organizes household The Choleric At Work Goal oriented Sees the whole picture Organizes well Seeks practical solutions Moves quickly to action Delegates work Insists on production Makes the goal Stimulates activity Thrives on opposition The Choleric As a Friend Has little need for friends Will work for group activity Will lead and organize Is usually right Excels in emergencies

77 Weaknesses of a Choleric The Extrovert | The Doer | The Optimist
The Choleric At Work Little tolerance for mistakes Doesn't analyze details Bored by trivia May make rash decisions May be rude or tactless Manipulates people Demanding of others End justifies the means Work may become his god Demands loyalty in the ranks The Choleric As a Friend Tends to use people Dominates others Knows everything Decides for others Can do everything better Is to independent Possessive of friends and mate Can't say, "I'm Sorry" May be right, but unpopular The Choleric's Emotions Bossy Impatient Quick-tempered Can't Relax Too impetuous Enjoys controversy and arguments Won't give up when loosing Comes on too strong Inflexible Is not complimentary Dislikes tears and emotions Is unsympathetic The Choleric As A Parent Tends to over dominate Too busy for family Gives answers too quickly Impatient with poor performance Won't let children relax May send them into depression

78 Strengths of a Sanguine
The Extrovert | The Talker | The Optimist The Sanguine As A Parent Makes Home Fun Is liked by children's friends Turns disaster into humor Is the circus master The Sanguine At Work Volunteers for Jobs thinks up new activities Looks great on the Surface Creative and colorful Has energy and enthusiasm Starts in a flashy way Inspires others to join charms others to work The Sanguine As a Friend Makes friends easily Loves People Thrives on compliments Seems exciting envied by others Doesn't hold grudges apologizes quickly Prevents dull moments Likes spontaneous activities The Sanguine's Emotions Appealing personality Talkative, Storyteller Life of the Party Good sense of humor Memory for color Physically holds on to listener Emotional and demonstrative Enthusiastic and expressive Cheerful and bubbling over Curious Good on stage Wide-eyed and innocent Lives in the present Changeable disposition Sincere at heart Always a child

79 Weaknesses of a Sanguine The Extrovert | The Talker | The Optimist
The Sanguine's Emotions Compulsive talker Exaggerates and elaborates Dwells on trivia Can't remember names Scares others off Too happy for some Has restless energy Egotistical Blusters and complains Naive, gets taken in Has loud voice and laugh Controlled by circumstances Gets angry easily Seems phony to some Never Grows Up The Sanguine As A Parent Keeps home in a frenzy Forgets children's appointments disorganized Doesn't listen to the whole story The Sanguine At Work Would rather talk forgets obligations Doesn't follow through Confidence fades fast Undisciplined Priorities out of order Decides by feelings Easily distracted Wastes time talking The Sanguine As a Friend Hates to be alone Needs to be center stage Wants to be popular Looks for credit dominates conversations Interrupts and doesn't listen answers for others Fickle and forgetful Makes excuses Repeats stories

80 Trait Perspective Gordon Allport 3 basic types of traits
1.Cardinal: our fundamental traits, the most pervasive and powerful human traits; “ruling passion” Ex. Mother Theresa was self-sacrificing. Not all people develop cardinal traits 2.Central: represent major personality characteristics easier to infer; such as honesty or fatalism. 3. Secondary: more limited to occurrence; such as a skill at playing darts or fluency in Chinese.

81 The Trait Perspective Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI) the most widely researched and clinically used of all personality tests originally developed to identify emotional disorders, like depression, delusions, and other psychological disorders (still considered its most appropriate use) now used for many other screening purposes

82 The Trait Perspective Empirically Derived Test
a test developed by testing a pool of items and then selecting those that discriminate between groups: such as the MMPI

83 The Trait Perspective Hysteria (uses symptoms to solve problems) Masculinity/femininity (interests like those of other sex) T-score 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Hypochondriasis (concern with body symptoms) Depression (pessimism, hopelessness) Psychopathic deviancy (disregard for social standards) Paranoia (delusions, suspiciousness) Psychasthenia (anxious, guilt feelings) Schizophrenia (withdrawn, bizarre thoughts) Hypomania (overactive, excited, impulsive) Social introversion (shy, inhibited) Clinically significant range After treatment (no scores in the clinically significant range) Before (anxious, depressed, and displaying deviant behaviors) Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI) test profile

84 The Trait Perspective Development of Personality Inventories
Factor Analysis The statistical procedure used separate out individual components of a construct aka. theoretical entity Ex. Development of the Big Five

85 The Trait Perspective The “Big Five” Personality Factors
Trait Dimension Description Emotional Stability Calm versus anxious Secure versus insecure Self-satisfied versus self-pitying Extraversion Sociable versus retiring Fun-loving versus sober Affectionate versus reserved Openness Imaginative versus practical Preference for variety versus preference for routine Independent versus conforming Agreeableness Soft-hearted versus ruthless Trusting versus suspicious Helpful versus uncooperative Conscientiousness Organized versus disorganized Careful versus careless Disciplined versus impulsive

86 Social-Cognitive Perspective
views behavior as influenced by the interaction between persons and their social context Reciprocal Determinism the interacting influences between personality and environmental factors Ex. Treating someone kindly increases their positive responses to that person which increases further kindness & trust

87 Social-Cognitive Perspective

88 Social-Cognitive Perspective
Julian Rotter Personal Control our sense of controlling our environments rather than feeling helpless External Locus of Control the perception that chance or outside forces beyond one’s personal control determine one’s fate

89 Social-Cognitive Perspective
Internal Locus of Control the perception that one controls one’s own fate More likely to achieve in school, act independently, enjoy better health, feel less depressed, delay gratification, and cope with stress much better Learned Helplessness the hopelessness and passive resignation an animal or human learns when unable to avoid repeated aversive events

90 Social-Cognitive Perspective
Learned Helplessness Uncontrollable bad events Perceived lack of control Generalized helpless behavior

91 Social-Cognitive theory
Albert Bandura Self Efficacy: a person’s sense of his own ability to perform a given task. High efficacy results in outperforming others with lower sense of self-efficacy.

92 Social-Cognitive theory
Measure of how helpless or effective you feel is based on where you stand optimism-pessimism Determining optimism is based on attributional style: whether someone sees something as with a positive or negative perspective

93 Social-Cognitive Perspective
Positive Psychology Similar to the humanistic perspective but goes further to look for evidence the scientific study of optimal human functioning…Martin Seligman aims to discover and promote conditions that enable individuals and communities to thrive which is in contrast to the humanistic perspective

94 Exploring the Self Spotlight Effect Self Esteem Self-Serving Bias
overestimating others noticing and evaluating our appearance, performance, and blunders Self Esteem one’s feelings of high or low self-worth Self-Serving Bias readiness to perceive oneself favorably

95 Exploring the Self Individualism Collectivism
giving priority to one’s own goals over group goals and defining one’s identity in terms of personal attributes rather than group identifications Collectivism giving priority to the goals of one’s group (often one’s extended family or work group) and defining one’s identity accordingly or social identity

96 Exploring the Self Morality Defined by individuals Defined by social networks (self-based) (duty-based) Attributing Behavior reflects one’s personality Behavior reflects social behaviors and attitudes and roles Value Contrasts Between Individualism and Collectivism Concept Individualism Collectivism Self Independent Interdependent (identity from individual traits) identity from belonging) Life task Discover and express one’s Maintain connections, fit in uniqueness What matters Me--personal achievement and We-group goals and solidarity; fullfillment; rights and liberties social responsibilities and relationships Coping method Change reality Accommodate to reality Relationships Many, often temporary or casual; Few, close and enduring; confrontation acceptable harmony valued

97 The Modern Unconscious Mind
Terror-Management Theory Faith in one’s worldview and the pursuit of self-esteem provide protection against a deeply rooted fear of death


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