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Gordon William Allport (November 11, 1897 – October 9, 1967) was an American psychologist. Allport was one of the first psychologists to focus on the study of the personality, and is often referred to as one of the founding figures of personality psychology. He contributed to the formation of values scales and rejected both a psychoanalytic approach to personality, which he thought often was too deeply interpretive, and a behavioral approach, which he thought did not provide deep enough interpretations from their data. Instead of these popular approaches, he developed an eclectic theory based on traits. He emphasized the uniqueness of each individual, and the importance of the present context, as opposed to history, for understanding the personality.
Gordon Allport | |
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Born | November 11, 1897 Montezuma, Indiana, US |
Died | October 9, 1967 | (aged 69)
Alma mater | Harvard |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Psychology |
Allport had a profound and lasting influence on the field of psychology, even though his work is cited much less often than that of other well-known figures. Part of his influence stemmed from his knack for exploring and broadly conceptualizing important topics (e.g. rumor, prejudice, religion, traits). Another part of his influence resulted from the deep and lasting impression he made on his students during his long teaching career, many of whom went on to have important careers in psychology. Among his many students were Jerome S. Bruner, Anthony Greenwald, Stanley Milgram, Leo Postman, Thomas Pettigrew, and M. Brewster Smith. His brother Floyd Henry Allport, was professor of social psychology and political psychology at Syracuse University's Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs (in Syracuse, New York) from 1924 until 1956, and visiting professor at University of California, Berkeley. A Review of General Psychology survey, published in 2002, ranked Allport as the 11th most cited psychologist of the 20th century.
Biography
Allport grew up in a religious family of Christian missionaries. He was born in Montezuma, Indiana, and was the youngest of four sons of John Edward and Nellie Edith (Wise) Allport. When Gordon Allport was six years old, the family had already moved many times and finally settled in Ohio. His early education was in the public schools of Cleveland, Ohio.
John Allport was a country doctor and had his clinic and hospital in the family home. Allport's father turned their home into a makeshift hospital, with patients as well as nurses residing there. Gordon Allport and his brothers grew up surrounded by their father's patients, nurses, and medical equipment, and he and his brothers often assisted their father in the clinic. Allport reported that "Tending office, washing bottles, and dealing with patients were important aspects of my early training" (p. 172). During this time, Allport's father was encapsulated in a blurb in Samuel Hopkins Adams' exposé in Collier's Magazine on fraudulent medicinal cures, later reprinted as the book The Great American Fraud: Articles on the Nostrum Evil and Quackery. While much of the book focuses on large scale, heavily advertised patent medicines available at the turn of the century, the author states Allport "would never have embodied this article were it not for the efforts of certain physicians of Cleveland." Allport was criticized for diagnosing and treating morphine addicts via mail simply on the basis of letters and no in-person appointments. Upon receiving Adams' letter detailing his concocted affliction, Allport replied back via mail, diagnosing Adams as a morphine addict and sending doses of the "Dr. J. Edward Allport System," designed to cure morphine addicts. Analysis of the medicine revealed its active ingredient to be nothing more than additional morphine, packed with a bottle of pink whiskey "to mix with the morphin[sp] when it gets low." Adams referred to Allport as a "[quack] who pretend[s] to be a physician," is "no less scoundrelly," and "is even more dangerous" than other fraudulent addiction cure peddlers mentioned earlier in the book.
Allport's mother was a former school teacher, who forcefully promoted her values of intellectual development and religion.
Biographers describe Allport as a reserved and diligent young boy who lived a fairly isolated childhood. As a teenager, Allport developed and managed his own printing business while serving as an editor of his high school newspaper. In 1915, he graduated second in his class at Glenville High School at the age of eighteen which earned him a scholarship that allowed him to attend Harvard University. Notably, one of his older brothers, Floyd Henry Allport, was working on his Ph.D. in psychology at Harvard.
Allport earned his A.B. degree in 1919 in Philosophy and Economics (not psychology).
After graduating from Harvard, Allport traveled to Robert College in Istanbul, Turkey, where he taught economics and philosophy for a year, before returning to Harvard to pursue his Ph.D. in psychology on a fellowship in 1920. His first publication, Personality Traits: Their Classification and Measurement in 1921, was co-authored with his older brother, Floyd Henry Allport. Allport earned his master's degree in 1921, studying under Herbert Langfeld, and then his Ph.D. in 1922, along the way taking a class with Hugo Münsterberg before the latter's death in 1916.
Harvard then awarded Allport a Sheldon Traveling Fellowship. He spent the first Sheldon year studying with the new Gestalt School in Berlin and Hamburg, Germany; and then the second year at Cambridge University.
In 1921 through 1937, Allport helped establish personality as a psychological research type within American psychology. He returned to Harvard as an instructor in psychology from 1924 to 1926 where he began teaching his course "Personality: Its Psychological and Social Aspects" in 1924. During this time, Allport married Ada Lufkin Gould, who was a clinical psychologist. Together they had one child, a boy, who later became a pediatrician. After going to teach introductory courses on social psychology and personality at Dartmouth College for four years, Allport returned to Harvard and remained there for the rest of his career.
Allport was a member of the faculty at Harvard University from 1930 to 1967. In 1931, he served on the faculty committee that established Harvard's Sociology Department. In the late 1940s, he helped to develop an introductory course for the new Social Relations Department. At that time, he was also editor of the Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology. Allport was also a Director of the Commission for the United Nations Educational Scientific, and Cultural Organization. He was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1933.
By 1937, Allport began to act as a spokesman for personality psychology. He appeared on radio talk shows, wrote literature reviews, articles, and a textbook. He was elected President of the American Psychological Association in 1939, being the second youngest person to hold that office. In 1943, he was elected President of the Eastern Psychological Association. In 1944, he served as President of the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues. In 1950, Allport published his third book titled The Individual and His Religion. His fourth book, The Nature of Prejudice, was published in 1954, based on his work with refugees during World War II. His fifth book, published in 1955, was titled Becoming: Basic Considerations for Psychology of Personality. In 1963, Allport was awarded the Gold Medal Award from the American Psychological Foundation. In the following year, he received the APA's Distinguished Scientific Contribution Award. Gordon Allport died on October 9, 1967, in Cambridge, Massachusetts, of lung cancer, just one month shy of his 70th birthday.
Allport's trait theory
Allport contributed to the trait theory of personality, and is known as a "trait" psychologist. He opposed the idea that people can be classified according to a small number of trait dimensions, arguing that each person is unique and distinguished by particular traits. In his work, Concepts of Trait and Personality (1927), Allport states that traits are "habits possessed of social significance" and become very predictable, traits are a unit of personality. Allport emphasized that an individual's personality is the single most unique thing about a person.
One of his early projects was to go through the dictionary and locate every term that he thought could describe a person. From this, he developed a list of 4500 trait-like words. He organized these words into three levels of traits. This is similar to Goldberg's fundamental lexical hypothesis, or the hypothesis that humans develop widely used, generic terms for individual differences in their daily interactions over time.
Allport's three-level hierarchy of traits are:
1. Cardinal trait - These traits are rare but is the trait that dominates and shapes a person's behavior. They exert a powerful influence on behavior which becomes aspects of a person's identity. These are the ruling passions/obsessions, such as a need for money, fame, etc.
2. Central trait - These traits are general characteristics found in some degree in every person. These are the basic building blocks that shape most of our behavior although they are not as overwhelming as cardinal traits. They influence but do not determine behavior. An example of a central trait would be honesty.
3. Secondary trait - These traits are the bottom tier of the hierarchy and are not as apparent as central traits (less influential). Secondary traits are characteristics seen only in certain circumstances (such as particular likes or dislikes that a very close friend may know). They must be included to provide a complete picture of human complexity.
Overall, Allport's three-level hierarchy of traits provides a framework for understanding the different levels of traits that collectively shape an individual's personality.
The Development of the Proprium
1. Sense of bodily "me" (first year)
It is perceived when infants can understand themselves through sensations and figure out what makes them and what does not.
2. Sense of self-identity (second year)
Though understanding whom they are by having a significance in their name has. This can then give them a sense of how they are and what that can mean socially.
3. Sense of self-esteem (third year)
With having a sense of who they are in this stage, they want to have a form of independence that can be stepped away from adult supervision.
4. Sense of self-extension (Fourth year)
In this stage, the child can see their bodies and extend to toys. The words that seem to be stated in their mind is mine.
5. Emergence of self-image (fourth to the sixth year)
There seems to be an awareness of the good me and the bad me for the children that can bring up what they expect others to expect from them. In this stage, certain goals they see for themselves are brought up.
6. Emergence of self as a rational coper (sixth to twelfth year)
At this stage, it is brought to the awareness that thoughts can help solve problems in which they tend to think a lot about their thinking.
7. Emergence of proproate striving (twelfth year through adolescence)
In this stage, it is believed that future goals are built to give a sense of meaning to one's life. Allport viewed a healthy person to create problems by making future goals that can be seen as unattainable in many cases. This sense of creating these long-term goals is set to differentiate from other stages and even from having a healthy or sick personality.
8. Emergence of self as knower (adulthood)
In this final stage, the self is seen as a knower who can be aware of and surpass the seven other propriate functions. When gone through all stages, you appear to use several or even all in daily tasks and experiences
Genotypes and phenotypes
Allport hypothesized the idea of internal and external forces that influence an individual's behavior. He called these forces Genotypes and Phenotypes. Genotypes are internal forces that relate to how a person retains information and uses it to interact with the external world. Phenotypes are external forces, these relate to the way an individual accepts his surroundings and how others influence their behavior. These forces generate the ways in which we behave and are the groundwork for the creation of individual traits.
The Problem with this hypothesis is that it cannot be proven as they are internal theories, influenced presumably by the outer environment.
Functional autonomy of motives
Allport was one of the first researchers to draw a distinction between Motive and Drive. He suggested that a drive forms as a reaction to a motive, which may outgrow the motive as the reason for a behavior. The drive then becomes autonomous and distinct from the motive, whether the motive was instinct or something else. The idea that drives can become independent of the original motives for a given behavior is known as "functional autonomy."
Allport gives the example of a man who seeks to perfect his task or craft. His original motive may be a sense of inferiority engrained in his childhood, but his diligence in his work and the motive it acquires, later on, is a need to excel in his chosen profession, which becomes the man's drive. Allport says that the theory:
... avoids the absurdity of regarding the energy of life now, in the present, as somehow consisting of early archaic forms (instincts, prepotent reflexes, or the never-changing Id). Learning brings new systems of interests into existence just as it does new abilities and skills. At each stage of development, these interests are always contemporary; whatever drives, drives now.
Bibliography
- Concepts of Trait and Personality. Psychological Bulletin, 24(5-1927), pp. 284–293
- Studies in expressive movement (with Vernon, P. E.) (1933) New York: Macmillan Publishers.
- Attitudes, in A Handbook of Social Psychology, ed. C. Murchison, (1935). Worcester, MA: Clark University Press, 789–844.
- . (1937) New York: Holt, Rinehart, & Winston.
- The Psychologist's Frame of Reference (1940). Classics in the History of Psychology -- Allport (1940)
- The Psychology of Rumor [with Leo Postman] (1947). New York: Henry Holt & Company
- The Individual and His Religion: A Psychological Interpretation. Oxford, England: Macmillan, 1950.
- The Nature of Personality: Selected Papers. (1950; 1975). Westport, CN : Greenwood Press. ISBN 0-8371-7432-5
- The Nature of Prejudice. (1954; 1979). Reading, MA : Addison-Wesley Pub. Co. ISBN 0-201-00178-0
- Becoming: Basic Considerations for a Psychology of Personality. (1955). New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-00264-5
- Personality & social encounter. (1960). Boston: Beacon Press.
- Pattern and Growth in Personality. (1961). Harcourt College Pub. ISBN 0-03-010810-1
- Letters from Jenny. (1965) New York: Harcourt, Brace & World
- The Person in Psychology (1968). Boston: Beacon Press.
See also
- Allport's Scale - a measure of the manifestation of prejudice in a society devised by Gordon Allport in 1954.
- List of science and religion scholars
- Contact hypothesis
- Labels of Primary Potency
Notes
- Sperry, Len (2015). Mental Health and Mental Disorders: An Encyclopedia of Conditions, Treatments, and Well-Being [3 volumes]: An Encyclopedia of Conditions, Treatments, and Well-Being. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO. p. 47. ISBN 978-1-4408-0383-3.
- "Why should we care about Gordon Allport?". Stolaf.edu. 2001-03-14. Archived from the original on 2012-02-18. Retrieved 2018-02-12.
- Haggbloom, Steven J.; Powell, John L. III; Warnick, Jason E.; Jones, Vinessa K.; Yarbrough, Gary L.; Russell, Tenea M.; Borecky, Chris M.; McGahhey, Reagan; et al. (2002). "The 100 most eminent psychologists of the 20th century". Review of General Psychology. 6 (2): 139–152. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.586.1913. doi:10.1037/1089-2680.6.2.139. S2CID 145668721.
- Nicholson, Ian A. M. (1998). "Gordon Allport, character, and the "culture of personality," 1897–1937". History of Psychology. 1 (1): 52–68. doi:10.1037/1093-4510.1.1.52. ISSN 1939-0610. PMID 11620320.
- Sheehy, Noel; Forsythe, Alexandra (2004). Fifty Key Thinkers in Psychology. London: Routledge. pp. 2. ISBN 0-415-16774-4.
- HJelle, L.A., Ziegler, D.J. (1992). Personality Theories: Basic Assumptions, Research, and Applications. New York: McGraw-Hill Book Company. ISBN 9780071126403
- Adams, Samuel Hopkins (1912). The Great American Fraud: Articles on the Nostrum Evil and Quackery. Chicago: Press of American Medical Association, P.F. Collier & Son Inc. p. 118.
- V.W. Hevern (1996-2003). Narrative Psychology: Internet and Resource Guide.
- Pettigrew, T.F. (1999). Journal of Social Issues, Fall, 1999
- Hergenhahn, B. R.; Olson, Matthew H. (2007). An Introduction to Theories of Personality. Pearson Prentice Hall. ISBN 978-0-13-194228-8.
- Bowman, John S. The Cambridge Dictionary of American Biography. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995) p. 13
- "Doctoral Alumni". psychology.fas.harvard.edu. Retrieved 2022-06-16.
- "Book of Members, 1780-2010: Chapter A" (PDF). American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 15 April 2011.
- "Later Life". Shrike.depaul.edu. 1967-10-09. Retrieved 2018-02-12.
- Allen, Bem (2016). Personality Theories: Development, Growth, and Diversity. Oxon: Routledge. p. 414. ISBN 978-0-205-43912-6.
- Allport, Gordon W. (1927). "Concepts of trait and personality". Psychological Bulletin. 24 (5): 284–293. doi:10.1037/h0073629. ISSN 1939-1455.
- Hergenhahn, B. R., Matthew H. Olson. An Introduction to Theories of Personality. Pearson Education, 2007.
- Allport, G. W. (1937). The American Journal of Psychology, 50, pp. 141-156.
References
- Matlin, MW., (1995) Psychology. Texas: Harcourt Brace College Publishers.
Further reading
- Ian Nicholson, Inventing Personality: Gordon Allport and the Science of Selfhood, American Psychological Association, 2003, ISBN 1-55798-929-X
- Hocutt, Max (2004). Review - Inventing Personality. Metapsychology Online Reviews Archived 2017-08-07 at the Wayback Machine
- Nicholson, I. (2000). "'A coherent datum of perception': Gordon Allport, Floyd Allport and the politics of personality." Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences 36: 463–470.
- Nicholson, I. (1998). Gordon Allport, character, and the 'culture of personality', 1897–1937. History of Psychology, 1, 52–68.
- Nicholson, I. (1997). Humanistic psychology and intellectual identity: The 'open' system of Gordon Allport. Journal of Humanistic Psychology, 37, 60–78.
- Nicholson, I. (1997). To "correlate psychology and social ethics": Gordon Allport and the first course in American personality psychology. Journal of Personality, 65, 733–742.
- On the Nature of Prejudice: Fifty Years After Allport, hrg. von Peter Glick, John Dovidio, Laurie A. Rudman, Blackwell Publishing, 2005, ISBN 1-4051-2750-3
External links
- Allports classic paper on autonomy of motives at Classics in the History of Psychology page.
- Gordon Allport, The Scapegoats (1954)
- Gordon Allport, Becoming (1955)
- Gordon Allport, The Open System in Personality Theory (1960)
- Gordon Allport at Find a Grave
This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Gordon Allport news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2007 Learn how and when to remove this message Gordon William Allport November 11 1897 October 9 1967 was an American psychologist Allport was one of the first psychologists to focus on the study of the personality and is often referred to as one of the founding figures of personality psychology He contributed to the formation of values scales and rejected both a psychoanalytic approach to personality which he thought often was too deeply interpretive and a behavioral approach which he thought did not provide deep enough interpretations from their data Instead of these popular approaches he developed an eclectic theory based on traits He emphasized the uniqueness of each individual and the importance of the present context as opposed to history for understanding the personality Gordon AllportBornNovember 11 1897 Montezuma Indiana USDiedOctober 9 1967 1967 10 09 aged 69 Cambridge Massachusetts USAlma materHarvardScientific careerFieldsPsychology Allport had a profound and lasting influence on the field of psychology even though his work is cited much less often than that of other well known figures Part of his influence stemmed from his knack for exploring and broadly conceptualizing important topics e g rumor prejudice religion traits Another part of his influence resulted from the deep and lasting impression he made on his students during his long teaching career many of whom went on to have important careers in psychology Among his many students were Jerome S Bruner Anthony Greenwald Stanley Milgram Leo Postman Thomas Pettigrew and M Brewster Smith His brother Floyd Henry Allport was professor of social psychology and political psychology at Syracuse University s Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs in Syracuse New York from 1924 until 1956 and visiting professor at University of California Berkeley A Review of General Psychology survey published in 2002 ranked Allport as the 11th most cited psychologist of the 20th century BiographyAllport grew up in a religious family of Christian missionaries He was born in Montezuma Indiana and was the youngest of four sons of John Edward and Nellie Edith Wise Allport When Gordon Allport was six years old the family had already moved many times and finally settled in Ohio His early education was in the public schools of Cleveland Ohio John Allport was a country doctor and had his clinic and hospital in the family home Allport s father turned their home into a makeshift hospital with patients as well as nurses residing there Gordon Allport and his brothers grew up surrounded by their father s patients nurses and medical equipment and he and his brothers often assisted their father in the clinic Allport reported that Tending office washing bottles and dealing with patients were important aspects of my early training p 172 During this time Allport s father was encapsulated in a blurb in Samuel Hopkins Adams expose in Collier s Magazine on fraudulent medicinal cures later reprinted as the book The Great American Fraud Articles on the Nostrum Evil and Quackery While much of the book focuses on large scale heavily advertised patent medicines available at the turn of the century the author states Allport would never have embodied this article were it not for the efforts of certain physicians of Cleveland Allport was criticized for diagnosing and treating morphine addicts via mail simply on the basis of letters and no in person appointments Upon receiving Adams letter detailing his concocted affliction Allport replied back via mail diagnosing Adams as a morphine addict and sending doses of the Dr J Edward Allport System designed to cure morphine addicts Analysis of the medicine revealed its active ingredient to be nothing more than additional morphine packed with a bottle of pink whiskey to mix with the morphin sp when it gets low Adams referred to Allport as a quack who pretend s to be a physician is no less scoundrelly and is even more dangerous than other fraudulent addiction cure peddlers mentioned earlier in the book Allport s mother was a former school teacher who forcefully promoted her values of intellectual development and religion Biographers describe Allport as a reserved and diligent young boy who lived a fairly isolated childhood As a teenager Allport developed and managed his own printing business while serving as an editor of his high school newspaper In 1915 he graduated second in his class at Glenville High School at the age of eighteen which earned him a scholarship that allowed him to attend Harvard University Notably one of his older brothers Floyd Henry Allport was working on his Ph D in psychology at Harvard Allport earned his A B degree in 1919 in Philosophy and Economics not psychology After graduating from Harvard Allport traveled to Robert College in Istanbul Turkey where he taught economics and philosophy for a year before returning to Harvard to pursue his Ph D in psychology on a fellowship in 1920 His first publication Personality Traits Their Classification and Measurement in 1921 was co authored with his older brother Floyd Henry Allport Allport earned his master s degree in 1921 studying under Herbert Langfeld and then his Ph D in 1922 along the way taking a class with Hugo Munsterberg before the latter s death in 1916 Harvard then awarded Allport a Sheldon Traveling Fellowship He spent the first Sheldon year studying with the new Gestalt School in Berlin and Hamburg Germany and then the second year at Cambridge University In 1921 through 1937 Allport helped establish personality as a psychological research type within American psychology He returned to Harvard as an instructor in psychology from 1924 to 1926 where he began teaching his course Personality Its Psychological and Social Aspects in 1924 During this time Allport married Ada Lufkin Gould who was a clinical psychologist Together they had one child a boy who later became a pediatrician After going to teach introductory courses on social psychology and personality at Dartmouth College for four years Allport returned to Harvard and remained there for the rest of his career Allport was a member of the faculty at Harvard University from 1930 to 1967 In 1931 he served on the faculty committee that established Harvard s Sociology Department In the late 1940s he helped to develop an introductory course for the new Social Relations Department At that time he was also editor of the Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology Allport was also a Director of the Commission for the United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization He was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1933 By 1937 Allport began to act as a spokesman for personality psychology He appeared on radio talk shows wrote literature reviews articles and a textbook He was elected President of the American Psychological Association in 1939 being the second youngest person to hold that office In 1943 he was elected President of the Eastern Psychological Association In 1944 he served as President of the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues In 1950 Allport published his third book titled The Individual and His Religion His fourth book The Nature of Prejudice was published in 1954 based on his work with refugees during World War II His fifth book published in 1955 was titled Becoming Basic Considerations for Psychology of Personality In 1963 Allport was awarded the Gold Medal Award from the American Psychological Foundation In the following year he received the APA s Distinguished Scientific Contribution Award Gordon Allport died on October 9 1967 in Cambridge Massachusetts of lung cancer just one month shy of his 70th birthday Allport s trait theoryAllport contributed to the trait theory of personality and is known as a trait psychologist He opposed the idea that people can be classified according to a small number of trait dimensions arguing that each person is unique and distinguished by particular traits In his work Concepts of Trait and Personality 1927 Allport states that traits are habits possessed of social significance and become very predictable traits are a unit of personality Allport emphasized that an individual s personality is the single most unique thing about a person One of his early projects was to go through the dictionary and locate every term that he thought could describe a person From this he developed a list of 4500 trait like words He organized these words into three levels of traits This is similar to Goldberg s fundamental lexical hypothesis or the hypothesis that humans develop widely used generic terms for individual differences in their daily interactions over time Allport s three level hierarchy of traits are 1 Cardinal trait These traits are rare but is the trait that dominates and shapes a person s behavior They exert a powerful influence on behavior which becomes aspects of a person s identity These are the ruling passions obsessions such as a need for money fame etc 2 Central trait These traits are general characteristics found in some degree in every person These are the basic building blocks that shape most of our behavior although they are not as overwhelming as cardinal traits They influence but do not determine behavior An example of a central trait would be honesty 3 Secondary trait These traits are the bottom tier of the hierarchy and are not as apparent as central traits less influential Secondary traits are characteristics seen only in certain circumstances such as particular likes or dislikes that a very close friend may know They must be included to provide a complete picture of human complexity Overall Allport s three level hierarchy of traits provides a framework for understanding the different levels of traits that collectively shape an individual s personality The Development of the Proprium1 Sense of bodily me first year It is perceived when infants can understand themselves through sensations and figure out what makes them and what does not 2 Sense of self identity second year Though understanding whom they are by having a significance in their name has This can then give them a sense of how they are and what that can mean socially 3 Sense of self esteem third year With having a sense of who they are in this stage they want to have a form of independence that can be stepped away from adult supervision 4 Sense of self extension Fourth year In this stage the child can see their bodies and extend to toys The words that seem to be stated in their mind is mine 5 Emergence of self image fourth to the sixth year There seems to be an awareness of the good me and the bad me for the children that can bring up what they expect others to expect from them In this stage certain goals they see for themselves are brought up 6 Emergence of self as a rational coper sixth to twelfth year At this stage it is brought to the awareness that thoughts can help solve problems in which they tend to think a lot about their thinking 7 Emergence of proproate striving twelfth year through adolescence In this stage it is believed that future goals are built to give a sense of meaning to one s life Allport viewed a healthy person to create problems by making future goals that can be seen as unattainable in many cases This sense of creating these long term goals is set to differentiate from other stages and even from having a healthy or sick personality 8 Emergence of self as knower adulthood In this final stage the self is seen as a knower who can be aware of and surpass the seven other propriate functions When gone through all stages you appear to use several or even all in daily tasks and experiencesGenotypes and phenotypesAllport hypothesized the idea of internal and external forces that influence an individual s behavior He called these forces Genotypes and Phenotypes Genotypes are internal forces that relate to how a person retains information and uses it to interact with the external world Phenotypes are external forces these relate to the way an individual accepts his surroundings and how others influence their behavior These forces generate the ways in which we behave and are the groundwork for the creation of individual traits The Problem with this hypothesis is that it cannot be proven as they are internal theories influenced presumably by the outer environment Functional autonomy of motivesAllport was one of the first researchers to draw a distinction between Motive and Drive He suggested that a drive forms as a reaction to a motive which may outgrow the motive as the reason for a behavior The drive then becomes autonomous and distinct from the motive whether the motive was instinct or something else The idea that drives can become independent of the original motives for a given behavior is known as functional autonomy Allport gives the example of a man who seeks to perfect his task or craft His original motive may be a sense of inferiority engrained in his childhood but his diligence in his work and the motive it acquires later on is a need to excel in his chosen profession which becomes the man s drive Allport says that the theory avoids the absurdity of regarding the energy of life now in the present as somehow consisting of early archaic forms instincts prepotent reflexes or the never changing Id Learning brings new systems of interests into existence just as it does new abilities and skills At each stage of development these interests are always contemporary whatever drives drives now BibliographyConcepts of Trait and Personality Psychological Bulletin 24 5 1927 pp 284 293 Studies in expressive movement with Vernon P E 1933 New York Macmillan Publishers Attitudes in A Handbook of Social Psychology ed C Murchison 1935 Worcester MA Clark University Press 789 844 1937 New York Holt Rinehart amp Winston The Psychologist s Frame of Reference 1940 Classics in the History of Psychology Allport 1940 The Psychology of Rumor with Leo Postman 1947 New York Henry Holt amp Company The Individual and His Religion A Psychological Interpretation Oxford England Macmillan 1950 The Nature of Personality Selected Papers 1950 1975 Westport CN Greenwood Press ISBN 0 8371 7432 5 The Nature of Prejudice 1954 1979 Reading MA Addison Wesley Pub Co ISBN 0 201 00178 0 Becoming Basic Considerations for a Psychology of Personality 1955 New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 00264 5 Personality amp social encounter 1960 Boston Beacon Press Pattern and Growth in Personality 1961 Harcourt College Pub ISBN 0 03 010810 1 Letters from Jenny 1965 New York Harcourt Brace amp World The Person in Psychology 1968 Boston Beacon Press See alsoAllport s Scale a measure of the manifestation of prejudice in a society devised by Gordon Allport in 1954 List of science and religion scholars Contact hypothesis Labels of Primary PotencyNotesSperry Len 2015 Mental Health and Mental Disorders An Encyclopedia of Conditions Treatments and Well Being 3 volumes An Encyclopedia of Conditions Treatments and Well Being Santa Barbara CA ABC CLIO p 47 ISBN 978 1 4408 0383 3 Why should we care about Gordon Allport Stolaf edu 2001 03 14 Archived from the original on 2012 02 18 Retrieved 2018 02 12 Haggbloom Steven J Powell John L III Warnick Jason E Jones Vinessa K Yarbrough Gary L Russell Tenea M Borecky Chris M McGahhey Reagan et al 2002 The 100 most eminent psychologists of the 20th century Review of General Psychology 6 2 139 152 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 586 1913 doi 10 1037 1089 2680 6 2 139 S2CID 145668721 Nicholson Ian A M 1998 Gordon Allport character and the culture of personality 1897 1937 History of Psychology 1 1 52 68 doi 10 1037 1093 4510 1 1 52 ISSN 1939 0610 PMID 11620320 Sheehy Noel Forsythe Alexandra 2004 Fifty Key Thinkers in Psychology London Routledge pp 2 ISBN 0 415 16774 4 HJelle L A Ziegler D J 1992 Personality Theories Basic Assumptions Research and Applications New York McGraw Hill Book Company ISBN 9780071126403 Adams Samuel Hopkins 1912 The Great American Fraud Articles on the Nostrum Evil and Quackery Chicago Press of American Medical Association P F Collier amp Son Inc p 118 V W Hevern 1996 2003 Narrative Psychology Internet and Resource Guide Pettigrew T F 1999 Journal of Social Issues Fall 1999 Hergenhahn B R Olson Matthew H 2007 An Introduction to Theories of Personality Pearson Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0 13 194228 8 Bowman John S The Cambridge Dictionary of American Biography Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1995 p 13 Doctoral Alumni psychology fas harvard edu Retrieved 2022 06 16 Book of Members 1780 2010 Chapter A PDF American Academy of Arts and Sciences Retrieved 15 April 2011 Later Life Shrike depaul edu 1967 10 09 Retrieved 2018 02 12 Allen Bem 2016 Personality Theories Development Growth and Diversity Oxon Routledge p 414 ISBN 978 0 205 43912 6 Allport Gordon W 1927 Concepts of trait and personality Psychological Bulletin 24 5 284 293 doi 10 1037 h0073629 ISSN 1939 1455 Hergenhahn B R Matthew H Olson An Introduction to Theories of Personality Pearson Education 2007 Allport G W 1937 The American Journal of Psychology 50 pp 141 156 ReferencesMatlin MW 1995 Psychology Texas Harcourt Brace College Publishers Further readingIan Nicholson Inventing Personality Gordon Allport and the Science of Selfhood American Psychological Association 2003 ISBN 1 55798 929 X Hocutt Max 2004 Review Inventing Personality Metapsychology Online Reviews Archived 2017 08 07 at the Wayback Machine Nicholson I 2000 A coherent datum of perception Gordon Allport Floyd Allport and the politics of personality Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences 36 463 470 Nicholson I 1998 Gordon Allport character and the culture of personality 1897 1937 History of Psychology 1 52 68 Nicholson I 1997 Humanistic psychology and intellectual identity The open system of Gordon Allport Journal of Humanistic Psychology 37 60 78 Nicholson I 1997 To correlate psychology and social ethics Gordon Allport and the first course in American personality psychology Journal of Personality 65 733 742 On the Nature of Prejudice Fifty Years After Allport hrg von Peter Glick John Dovidio Laurie A Rudman Blackwell Publishing 2005 ISBN 1 4051 2750 3External linksLibrary resources about Gordon Allport Resources in your library Resources in other libraries By Gordon Allport Resources in your library Resources in other libraries Allports classic paper on autonomy of motives at Classics in the History of Psychology page Gordon Allport The Scapegoats 1954 Gordon Allport Becoming 1955 Gordon Allport The Open System in Personality Theory 1960 Gordon Allport at Find a Grave