Theories_of_Personality 7th Ed Feist

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

Back Matter Subject Index © The McGraw−Hill^635
Companies, 2009

Subject Index S-9

learning, 480–483
enactive, 482–483
experience and, 558
observational, 481–482
learning theories
Bandura’s social cognitive
theory, 477–508
Kelly’s personal construct
theory, 547–573
Rotter and Mischel’s cognitive
social learning theory,
509–546
Skinner’s behavioral analysis,
440–476
Letters from Jenny(Allport),
390–392, 392t
LGS. SeeLoyola Generativity Scale
libido, 31
The Life Cycle Completed
(Erikson), 246
Life History and the Historical
Moment(Erikson), 246
listening, empathic, 323–324
locus of control, 522, 540–541
love, 179, 354, 518–519
belongingness needs and,
281–282
forms of, 355–356
of Fromm, 192
self-actualization, sex and, 296
union of will and, 354–355
in young adulthood, 260
Love and Will(May), 345
Loyola Generativity Scale
(LGS), 267
lust, 220–221


M
magnetic resonance imaging (MRI),



  1. See alsofunctional
    magnetic resonance
    imaging
    maintenance, need for, 314
    maladaptive behavior, 525–526
    maladjustment, 80–81
    male Oedipus complex, 41–42
    malevolence, 219–220
    in Sullivan’s interpersonal
    theory, 240
    malignant aggression, 193
    malignant narcissism, 210
    Hitler and, 206


Man and His Symbols
(Jung), 127
Man for Himself(Fromm),
190, 210
mandala, 112–113
manifest content, 49
Marion Taylor diaries, 389–390
marketing character, 199–200, 204
Marx’s Concept of Man
(Fromm), 190
masculine protest, 83–85
Maslow’s holistic-dynamic theory.
Seeholistic-dynamic
theory, of Maslow
masochism, 33, 197
mastery experiences, 490
masturbation, 41, 43
A Matter of Consequences
(Skinner), 445
maturity, 38, 46–47
Allport’s characteristics of,
379–380
Maudley Personality Inventory
(MPI), 415
May’s existential psychology. See
existential psychology,
of May
MBTI. SeeMyers-Briggs Type
Indicator
McCrae’s trait and factor theories.
Seetrait and factor
theories, of Eysenck,
Costa, & McCrae
me personifications, 222–223
The Meaning of Anxiety(May),
345, 351
mechanisms of escape, 196–197
authoritarianism, 196–197
conformity, 197
destructiveness, 197
Memories, Dreams, Reflections
(Jung), 98, 100, 101, 102,
107, 108, 125
mental life, Freud’s levels of,
23–27, 26f
provinces of mind and, 28f
metamotivation, 289
metapathology, 286
methods of investigation, of Jung,
123–129
active imagination, 126–128
dream analysis, 124–126

psychotherapy, 128–129
word association test, 124
middle life, 122
Mischel’s cognitive social learning
theory. Seecognitive
social learning theory, of
Rotter and Mischel
mitwelt(relations with others), 348,
352–353, 362
modeling, 481
modulation corollary, 558
moral agency, self-regulation
through, 496–498
moral anxiety, 34
moral hypochondriasis, 201
moralistic principles, 30
morphogenic science,
375, 389
mortality salience, 364–365
motivation, 335–337, 482. See also
conscious v. unconscious
motivation
of Allport’s psychology of the
individual, 384–388
of Maslow’s holistic-dynamic
theory, 279–288
meta-, 289
motivational dispositions, 383
movement, freedom of, 519–520
moving against people, 171f,
172, 174t
moving away from people, 171f,
173–174, 174t
moving backward, 83
moving toward people, 171f,
172, 174t
MPI. SeeMaudley Personality
Inventory
MRI. Seemagnetic resonance
imaging
Myers-Briggs Type Indicator
(MBTI), 129, 130, 421
myths, 359–361

N
narcissism, 153, 203f
malignant, 210
primary, 32
secondary, 32
natural science, 59
natural selection, 458
naturalness, 291
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