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Chapter 2
t
heories of
p
ersonality
Chapter 2 Theories of Personality 77
Situations and Social Learning
The social-cognitive learning
theory of personality:
- holds that traits result in part
from a person’s learning history
and resulting expectations and
beliefs. - emphasizes reciprocal deter-
minism, the two-way interac-
tion between a person’s qualities
and the specific situation. - helps explain why siblings who
grow up together are often so
different, a result of their
nonshared environment.
Parental Influence—and Its Limits
The widespread belief that parents are the
major influence on their children’s personali-
ties has been undermined by three lines of
evidence:
- The shared environment of the home
has relatively little effect on children’s
personalities; the strongest influences are
experiences in the nonshared environ-
ment. - Few parents have a single child-rearing
style that is consistent over time and that
they use with all their children. - Even when parents try to be consistent,
there may be little relation between what
they do and how their children turn out.
The Power of Peers
Peer groups’ influence can be more
powerful than parents’ influence on a
child’s personality development.
Environmental Influences
Culture, Values, and Traits
A culture is a program of shared rules or values that govern the behavior of members of a community or society.
- In individualist cultures, the independence of the individual often takes precedence over the needs of the group.
- In collectivist cultures, group harmony often takes precedence over the wishes of the individual.
Evaluating Cultural Approaches
- Cultural psychologists seek to describe cultural
influences on personality without stereotyping. - Individuals are affected by their culture, but
they vary within it.
Cultural Influences
The Inner Experience
Humanist psychology emphasizes a person’s subjective sense of self.
- Abraham Maslow introduced the concepts of peak experiences and self-actualization.
- Carl Rogers stressed the importance of unconditional positive regard.
- Rollo May’s inclusion of existentialism emphasized some of the inherent human challenges that result from free will.
Many humanist assumptions are untestable and hard to define operationally, but humanist ideas about positive qualities, such
as courage and resilience, have added balance to the study of personality. - When people fail to understand
the influence of culture on
behavior, they may misattribute a
person’s behavior to personality.
For example, cultures differ in
their rules governing notions of
cleanliness, helpfulness, and time. - Male aggressiveness is often less
a matter of testosterone or personality
than of cultural norms, determined in turn by a culture’s
economy and whether men come from a culture of honor.