Determinants of Personality
Determinants of Personality
Determinants of Personality
1. The psychological
2. The sociological
Personality
Personality is not related to bodily structure alone. It includes both structure and
dynamics. Personality is an indivisible unit.
Every personality is unique. Personality refers to persistent qualities of the individual.
It expresses consistency and regularity. Personality is acquired. It is influenced by
social interaction. It is defined in terms of behavior.
According to Anderson and Parker personality is the totality of habits, attitudes and
traits that result from socialization and characterizes us in our relationship with others.
Lawrence A Pewin has given a working definition of personality in these words,
"Personality represents those structural and dynamic properties of an individual or
individuals as they reflect themselves in characteristic responses to situations.
Personality Disorganization
Society everywhere demands from its member's conformity to its folkways and mores,
to its values and standards. But often the individual fails to meet the requirements of
the society in which he lives.
As a result he develops personality problems and becomes disorganized. Such a
person is considered mentally unfit incase of mental derangement or abnormality.
Personality disorganization may take the milder or serious forms of mental disorder.
In addition to mentally disorganized persons there are other examples of personality
disorganization in the alcoholics, criminals, gamblers and drug addicts who are
mentally normal but socially abnormal.
The rapid changes in society create new ideas set up new standards while the old ones
still persist. All this leaves the individual bewildered and helpless in coping with the
new situation in which he finds himself. Under the circumstances the individual may
become a victim of mental disorder or become criminal or in extreme cases commit
suicide.
There is close relation between culture and personality disorganization. Every human
being in modern culture suffers from inner conflicts. Davis writes so far as mental
disorder is concerned the significant question is whether the social system is unified
by a nucleus of common values.
According to Ogburn and Nimkoff cultures have their own characteristic mental
disorders reflecting distinctive cultural influences. Every culture embodies cultural
categories and values. If the individual fails to make good within the framework of
cultural categories and values the result is personal disorganization. Moreover there
are conflicts and contradictions in every culture. Not only different persons hold
different attitudes but the same individual holds contradictory and conflicting attitudes.
Even within the family there may be incompatible values and loyalties.
Personality Reorganization
The cases of personality disorganization have increased in modern society. The social
scientists are busy in analyzing the causes and finding out the remedies.
There is however still a difference of opinion as to the best way to proceed. Those
who regard organic factors as the main determinants of social behavior seek to
improve it through eugenic means of one kind or another.
The psychologists, psychiatrists and psychoanalysts try to find the cause and remedy
in the individual alone as if he were living in a vacuum. Then there are
environmentalists who regard social environment as the main factor of personality
disorganization and consequently regard change in the environment as all important.
The problem of personality disorganization are many sided and any effective treatment
will need a consideration of heredity,biological,psychological and environmental factors
and a unification of culture bound together by mutually compatible and common
values.
Personality Development
An individual's personality is the complex of
mental characteristics that makes them an exuberant
unique from other people. It includes all of emotional tone
the patterns of thought and emotions that
cause us to do and say things in particular
ways. At a basic level, personality is
expressed through our temperament or
emotional tone. However, personality also
colors our values, beliefs, and
expectations. There are many potential
factors that are involved in shaping a
personality. These factors are usually seen
as coming from heredity and the environment. Research by
psychologists over the last several decades has increasingly pointed to
hereditary factors being more important, especially for basic personality
traits such as emotional tone. However, the acquisition of values,
beliefs, and expectations seem to be due more to socialization and
unique experiences, especially during childhood.
There are always unique situations and interpersonal events that help to
shape our personalities. Such things as having alcoholic parents, being
seriously injured in a car accident, or being raped can leave mental
scars that make us fearful and less trusting. If you are an only child,
you don't have to learn how to compromise as much as children who
have several siblings. Chance meetings and actions may have a major
impact on the rest of our lives and affect our personalities. For instance,
being accepted for admission to a prestigious university or being in the
right place at the right time to meet the person who will become your
spouse or life partner can significantly alter the course of the rest of your
life. Similarly, being drafted into the military during wartime, learning
that you were adopted, or personally witnessing a tragic event, such as
the destruction of the World Trade Center towers in New York, can
change your basic perspective.
Plains Indian
Benedict's views were especially popular in the 1930's
among early feminists such as her student Margaret
Mead. This was because if personality is entirely
learned, it means that feminine and masculine
personality traits are not biologically hard-wired in. In
other words, culture rather than genes, makes women
nurturing towards children and passive in response to
men. Likewise, culture makes men aggressive and
domineering. If this is true, these stereotypical
behaviors can be altered and even reversed. Mead Polynesian woman
carried out ethnographic field work among
the Polynesian and Melanesian peoples of the South Pacific to
find examples of societies in which femininity and masculinity have very
different and even opposite characteristics from those found in the
Western World. She began her research in Samoa in 1925 where
she discovered a relaxed adolescence in which sex is talked about
freely by boys and girls rather than hidden or suppressed.
Most anthropologists today believe that Benedict and her students went
too far in their assertions about the influence of culture on personality
formation and in discounting heredity. They also tended to over simplify
by defining people who did not share all of the traits of the "national
personality type" as being deviants. It is more accurate to see the
members of a society as having a range of personality types. What
Benedict was describing was actually the modal personality . This
is the most common personality type within a society. In reality, there is
usually a range of normal personality types within each society.
In the early 1950's, David Riesman proposed that there are three
common types of modal personality that occur around the world. He
called them tradition oriented, inner-directed, and other directed
personalities. The tradition-oriented personality is one that places a
strong emphasis on doing things the same way that they have always
been done. Individuals with this sort of personality are less likely to try
new things and to seek new experiences. Those who have inner-
directed personalities are guilt oriented. That is to say, their behavior
is strongly controlled by their conscience. As a result, there is little need
for police to make sure that they obey the law. These individuals
monitor themselves. If they break the law, they are likely to turn
themselves in for punishment. In contrast, people with other-directed
personalities have more ambiguous feelings about right and
wrong. When they deviate from a societal norm, they usually don't feel
guilty. However, if they are caught in the act or exposed publicly, they
are likely to feel shame.
Biological Factors
The study of the biological contributions to personality may be studied under three heads:
a. Heredity: Heredity refers to those factors that were determined at conception.
Physical stature, facial attractiveness, sex, temperament, muscle composition and reflexes,
energy level, and biological rhythms are characteristics that are considered to be inherent
from one’s parents. The heredity approach argues that the ultimate explanation of an
individual's personality is the molecular structure of the genes, located in the
chromosomes.
Research on animals has showed that both physical and psychological characteristics can
be transmitted through heredity. But research on human beings is in adequate to support
this view point. However, psychologists and geneticists have accepted the fact that
heredity plays an important role in one's personality.
b. Brain: The second biological approach is to concentrate on the role that the brain plays in
personality. Though researchers make some promising inroads, the psychologists are unable to
prove empirically the contribution of human brain in influencing personality. The most recent
and exciting possibilities come from the work done with electrical stimulation of the brain
(ESB) and split-brain psychology.
Preliminary results from the electrical stimulation of the brain (ESB) research give
indication that better understanding of human personality and behaviour might come from
the study of the brain. Work with ESB on human subjects is just beginning.
There seem to be definite pleasurable and painful areas in the human brain. This being
true, it may be possible physically to manipulate personality through ESB.
c. Biofeedback: Until recently, physiologists and psychologists felt that certain biological
functions such as brainwave patterns, gastric secretions, and fluctuations in blood pressure and
skin temperature were beyond conscious control. Now some scientists believe that these
involuntary functions can be consciously controlled through biofeedback. In BFT the
individual learns the internal rhythm of a particular body process through electronic signals
feedback from equipment that is wired to the body area. From this biofeedback the person can
learn to control the body processin question. More research is needed on biofeedback before
any definitive conclusions can be drawn. But its potential impact could be extremely
interesting for the future.
d. Physical features: A vital ingredient of the personality, an individual's external appearance, is
biologically determined. The fact that a person is tall or short, fat or skinny, black or white
will influence the person's effect on others and this in turn, will affect the self-concept.
Practically all would agree that physical characteristics have at least some influence on the
personality. According to Paul H Mussen "a child's physical characteristics may be related to
his approach to the social environment, to the expectancies of others, and to their reactions to
him. These, inturn, may have impacts on personality development".
Personality Determinants in Organisational behaviour
Cultural Factors
Among the factors that exert pressures on our personality formation are the culture in which
we are raised, our early conditioning, the norms among our family, friends and social groups
and other influences we experience. Traditionally, cultural factors are usually considered to
make a more significant contribution to personality than biological factors.
The culture largely determines attributes toward independence, aggression, competition, and
cooperation. According to Paul H Mussen "each culture expects, and trains, its members to
behave in the ways that are acceptable to the group. To a marked degree, the child's cultural
group defines the range of experiences and situations he is likely to encounter and the values
and personality characteristics that will be reinforced and hence learned". Culture requires
both conformity and acceptance from its members.
There are several ways of ensuring that members comply with the dictates of the culture.
Family Factors
Whereas the culture generally prescribes and limits what a person can be taught, it is the
family, and later the social group, which selects, interprets and dispenses the culture. Thus,
the family probably has the most significant impact on early personality development.
A substantial amount of empirical evidence indicates that the overall home environment
created by the parents, in addition to their direct influence, is critical to personality
development. For example, children reared in a cold, un stimulating home are much more
likely to be socially and emotionally Mal adjusted than children rose by parents in a warm,
loving and stimulating environment.
The parents play an especially important part in the identification process, which is important
to the person's early development. According to Mischel, the process can be examined from
three different perspectives.
i. Identification can be viewed as the similarity of behaviour including feelings and attitudes
between child and model.
ii. Identification can be looked at as the child's motives or desires to be like the model.
iii. It can be viewed as the process through which the child actually takes on the attributes of the
model.
From all three perspectives, the identification process is fundamental to the understanding of
personality development. The home environment also influences the personality of an
individual. Siblings (brothers and sisters) also contribute to personality.
Social Factors
There is increasing recognition given to the role of other relevant persons, groups and
especially organizations, which greatly influence an individual's personality. This is
commonly called the socialization process. Socialization involves the process by which a
person acquires, from the enormously wide range of behavioural potentialities that are open
to him or her. Socialization starts with the initial contact between a mother and her new
infant. After infancy, other members of the immediate family – father, brothers, sisters and
close relatives or friends, then the social group – peers, school friends and members of the
work group, play influential roles.
Situational Factors
Human personality is also influenced by situational factors. The effect of environment is
quite strong. Knowledge, skill and language are obviously acquired and represent important
modifications of behaviour. An individual's personality, while generally stable and
consistent, does change in different situations. The different demands of different situations
call forth different aspects of one's personality. According to Milgram "Situation exerts an
important press on the individual. It exercises constraints and may provide push. In certain
circumstances it is not so much the kind of person a man is, as the kind of situation in which
he is placed that determines his actions". We should therefore not look at personality patterns
in isolation.