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2006-08-12 06:22:01 · 6 answers · asked by lja40 1 in Social Science Psychology

6 answers

Personality is the sum of all traits that define an individual. It is both subjective and objective. Each of us takes into account the evaluation that others have of us, as well as our notion of our "ideal self."

Personality includes intelligence and our consciousness of it, personal appearance and our evaluation of our own attractiveness, and verbal expression, including speech patterns, vocabulary, and swiftness of response.

Our sense of humor or lack thereof, our aspriations, and our personal experiences make each of us unique. Personalities probably vary as much as fingerprints.

In general, the more positive the self-evaluation and experiences, the more secure the personality. But, a person who is lacking in "good qualities" can develop a more positive personality by changing his or her behavioral patterns to ones that will produce more positive outcomes.

2006-08-12 06:50:22 · answer #1 · answered by Goethe 4 · 2 1

personality

Totality of an individual's behavioral and emotional characteristics. Personality embraces a person's moods, attitudes, opinions, motivations, and style of thinking, perceiving, speaking, and acting. It is part of what makes each individual distinct. Theories of personality have existed in most cultures and throughout most of recorded history. The ancient Greeks used their ideas about physiology to account for differences and similarities in temperament. In the 18th century Immanuel Kant, Charles-Louis Montesquieu, and Giambattista Vico proposed ways of understanding individual and group differences; in the early 20th century Ernst Kretschmer and the psychoanalysts Sigmund Freud, Alfred Adler, and Carl Jung offered competing personality theories. Freud's model rested on the power of psychosexual drives as mediated by the structural components of the id, ego, and superego and the interplay of conscious and unconscious motives. Particularly important was the array of defense mechanisms an individual employed. Jung, like Freud, emphasized unconscious motives but de-emphasized sexuality and advanced a typal theory that classified people as introverts and extraverts; he further claimed that an individual personality was a persona (i.e., social facade) drawn from the “collective unconscious,” a pool of inherited memories. Later theories by Erik H. Erikson, Gordon W. Allport, and Carl R. Rogers were also influential. Contemporary personality studies tend to be empirical (based on the administration of projective tests or personality inventories) and less theoretically sweeping and tend to emphasize personal identity and development. Personality traits are usually seen as the product of both genetic predisposition and experience.

2006-08-15 00:41:22 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

A set of characteristics that make each person unique.

2006-08-12 13:25:54 · answer #3 · answered by mynickname 3 · 0 1

Likes, dislikes, goals, ambitions, characteristics, sensitivities...

2006-08-13 00:56:51 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

Something I rarely have.

2006-08-12 13:27:10 · answer #5 · answered by ♥c0c0puffz♥ 7 · 0 1

what somones like on the inside !!

2006-08-12 13:27:34 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

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