New Ideas in Psychology, volume 57, pages 100759

What is personality? Two myths and a definition

Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2020-04-01
scimago Q1
wos Q2
SJR0.794
CiteScore4.8
Impact factor2.3
ISSN0732118X, 18733522
General Psychology
Psychology (miscellaneous)
Abstract
This article addresses the longstanding problem that the field of personality psychology remains in need of a consensus formulation of its core subject matter, that of the nature of “personality” itself. Part 1 of the article presents some reminders about the traditional pre-empirical status of concepts in science. Part 2 introduces and calls into question two widely accepted but nonetheless questionable propositions about the nature of personality: (a) that the term refers to an underlying causal entity within a person, and (b) that the study of personality is the study of the whole person. Part 3 presents a definition of “personality”, discussion elaborating and clarifying this definition, and an explication of the ways in which it differs from previous definitions. Part 4 discusses some benefits that accrue both to having a consensus definition in general, and to acceptance of the present definition in particular.
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