Theories_of_Personality 7th Ed Feist

(Claudeth Gamiao) #1
Feist−Feist: Theories of
Personality, Seventh
Edition

I. Introduction 1. Introduction to
Personality Theory

© The McGraw−Hill^15
Companies, 2009

theory. On one hand, it provides the building blocks for the theory, and on the other,
it receives its impetus from the dynamic, expanding theory. The more useful the the-
ory, the more research generated by it; the greater the amount of descriptive research,
the more complete the theory.
The second kind of research generated by a useful theory, hypothesis testing,
leads to an indirect verification of the usefulness of the theory. As we have noted, a
useful theory will generate many hypotheses that, when tested, add to a database that
may reshape and enlarge the theory. (Refer again to Figure 1.1.)


Is Falsifiable
A theory must also be evaluated on its ability to be confirmed or disconfirmed; that
is, it must be falsifiable.To be falsifiable, a theory must be precise enough to sug-
gest research that may either support or fail to support its major tenets. If a theory is
so vague and nebulous that both positive and negative research results can be inter-
preted as support, then that theory is not falsifiable and ceases to be useful. Falsifia-
bility, however, is not the same as false; it simply means that negative research re-
sults will refute the theory and force the theorist to either discard it or modify it.
A falsifiable theory is accountable to experimental results. Figure 1.1 depicts
a circular and mutually reinforcing connection between theory and research; each
forms a basis for the other. Science is distinguished from nonscience by its ability to
reject ideas that are not supported empirically even though they seem logical and ra-
tional. For example, Aristotle used logic to argue that lighter bodies fall at slower
rates than heavier bodies. Although his argument may have agreed with “common
sense,” it had one problem: It was empirically wrong.
Theories that rely heavily on unobservable transformations in the unconscious
are exceedingly difficult to either verify or falsify. For example, Freud’s theory


Chapter 1 Introduction to Personality Theory 9

FIGURE 1.1 The Interaction among Theory, Hypotheses, Research, and Research
Data.


meaning to dataTheory gives

Theory

Hypothesis

Research

Research
data

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hs

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eh

ro
y
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