Theories of Personality: George Kelly
Born: April 28, 1905, Perth, Kansas
Death: March 6, 1967
Career: He received a bachelor’s degree in physics and math, and a master’s in sociology. Then he received a bachelor of education degree in psychology and he received his PhD in psychology
During the depression, he worked at Fort Hays Kansas State College, where he developed his theory and clinical techniques. During World War II, Kelly served as an aviation psychologist with the Navy, followed by a stint at the University of Maryland.
In 1946, he left for Ohio State University, the year after Carl Rogers left, and became the director of his clinical program. He worked with Julian Rotter. It was here that his theory matured, where he wrote his two-volume work, The Psychology of Personal Constructs. In 1965, he began a research position at Brandeis University, where Maslow was working.
Human as Scientist
In an effort to understand the world, we develop personal constructs that serve as hypothesis that make the world meaningful to us
Construct: your constructs represent the view you have constructed about the world as you experienced it. On the other hand, your constructs indicate how you are likely to construe the world as you continue to experience it.
Kelly’s basic building block of personality
Defined: A bipolar cognitive structure that an individual uses to interpret and make predictions about the world
Moral-amoral, masculine-feminine, attractive-ugly, funny-boring
Constructs - ways of construing events/”seeing the world” so that the future is anticipated; templates we use to interpret people, events, etc.
Construction System: organization of many constructs (the personality), compilation of all of our constructs
Superordinate: the more important constructs, those that are on top of the construction system; your primary constructs
Subordinate: less important constructs, those that are at the bottom; alternative constructs
Range of Convenience
All of the events to which the construct is applicable
Ex. having a same construct for a father, teacher, or mentor
Range of Focus
Events within the range of convenience to which a construct is most readily applied
Ex. The construct is more applied to father than teacher or mentor, although it can be applied to all.
Permeability
Open to construing new events; construct can easily be modified
Impermeability: closed to the interpretation of new experiences; cannot be easily modified
Commonality
Sharing of constructs by 2 or more people whose experience are similar
Individuality
Differences among construction system in terms of content and organization; individuals can have some similar constructs but never the same construction system
According to Permeability
Preemptive: very closed construct (pigeon whole construct)
Tight: high predictability
Loose: low predictability
Constellatory: stereotype thinking; once an event is subsumed under one construct, its other characteristics are fixed; string of stereotypes
Ex. Policeman is lazy. If he is lazy, then he is corrupt. If he is corrupt then he is dishonest.
Propositional Construct: open to new experiences
According to Range of Convenience
Comprehensive: wide spectrum of events; applicable to many events
Incidental: narrow spectrum; limited application
According to Focus
Core: governs a person’s basic functioning
Peripheral: may be altered without serious modification
Fundamental Postulate
How people predict or anticipates future events determine their behavior
Constructive Alternativism
All of our present interpretations of the universe are subject to revision or replacement; all humans are sciences – their conclusions are subject to change
Change
Why do some people have very impermeable constructs? Because they do not want change. Change brings anxiety, fear, and threat to the person so they would rather maintain their old constructs than to adjust them
Kelly believed that people are strongly motivated to reduce or avoid both anxiety and threat
Anxiety: the experience that one’s construct system is not applicable to events (the persons can’t understand or predict)
Threat: the cognition that imminent comprehensive change is needed in a construct system
Circumspection Phase: person considers several constructs to use in interpreting a situation
Preemptive Phase: person reduces the number of alternative constructs to be used
Control or Choice Phase: person decides what construct to use then plan a course of action
Cognitively Complex Person (healthy personality)
Has a construction system containing constructs that are clearly differentiated
Can draw sharp distinctions between self and others
Has skill in predicting the behavior of others
Constructs are very permeable
Cognitively Simple Person (unhealthy personality)
Has a construction system in which the distinction among constructs is blurred
Has difficulty seeing distinction between self and others
Lacks skills in predicting the behavior of others
Views others in terms of few categories
11 Corollaries
Construction
A person anticipates events by construing their replications
We anticipate by interpreting
Experience
A person’s construction system varies as he successively construes the replication of events
We reconstruct in the light of experience
Dichotomy
A person’s construction system is composed of a finite number of dichotomous constructs
We make bipolar constructs (Self and selfish)
Organization
Each person characteristically evolves, for his convenience in anticipating events, a construction system embracing ordinal relationships between constructs
We developed an organized, hierarchical system of constructs
Range
A construct is convenient for the anticipation of a finite range of events only
Each construct has a certain focus and is not useful for everything
Modulation
The variation in a person’s construction system is limited by the permeability of the constructs within the range of convenience the variants lie
Some constructs we develop are flexible to open experience; others are not
Choice
A person chooses for himself an alternative in a dichotomized construct through which he anticipates the greater possibility for extension and definition of his system
We are free and able to choose among alternative of the construct
Individuality
Persons differ from each other in their construction of events
No 2 people interpret events in the same way
Commonality
To the extent that one person employ a variety of construction subsystems, which are inferentially incompatible with each other
We may be inconsistent within ourselves
Sociality
To the extent that one person construes the construction processes of another, he may play a role in a social process involving the other person
Social interactions entail understanding other constructs
Born: April 28, 1905, Perth, Kansas
Death: March 6, 1967
Career: He received a bachelor’s degree in physics and math, and a master’s in sociology. Then he received a bachelor of education degree in psychology and he received his PhD in psychology
During the depression, he worked at Fort Hays Kansas State College, where he developed his theory and clinical techniques. During World War II, Kelly served as an aviation psychologist with the Navy, followed by a stint at the University of Maryland.
In 1946, he left for Ohio State University, the year after Carl Rogers left, and became the director of his clinical program. He worked with Julian Rotter. It was here that his theory matured, where he wrote his two-volume work, The Psychology of Personal Constructs. In 1965, he began a research position at Brandeis University, where Maslow was working.
Human as Scientist
In an effort to understand the world, we develop personal constructs that serve as hypothesis that make the world meaningful to us
Construct: your constructs represent the view you have constructed about the world as you experienced it. On the other hand, your constructs indicate how you are likely to construe the world as you continue to experience it.
Kelly’s basic building block of personality
Defined: A bipolar cognitive structure that an individual uses to interpret and make predictions about the world
Moral-amoral, masculine-feminine, attractive-ugly, funny-boring
Constructs - ways of construing events/”seeing the world” so that the future is anticipated; templates we use to interpret people, events, etc.
Construction System: organization of many constructs (the personality), compilation of all of our constructs
Superordinate: the more important constructs, those that are on top of the construction system; your primary constructs
Subordinate: less important constructs, those that are at the bottom; alternative constructs
Range of Convenience
All of the events to which the construct is applicable
Ex. having a same construct for a father, teacher, or mentor
Range of Focus
Events within the range of convenience to which a construct is most readily applied
Ex. The construct is more applied to father than teacher or mentor, although it can be applied to all.
Permeability
Open to construing new events; construct can easily be modified
Impermeability: closed to the interpretation of new experiences; cannot be easily modified
Commonality
Sharing of constructs by 2 or more people whose experience are similar
Individuality
Differences among construction system in terms of content and organization; individuals can have some similar constructs but never the same construction system
According to Permeability
Preemptive: very closed construct (pigeon whole construct)
Tight: high predictability
Loose: low predictability
Constellatory: stereotype thinking; once an event is subsumed under one construct, its other characteristics are fixed; string of stereotypes
Ex. Policeman is lazy. If he is lazy, then he is corrupt. If he is corrupt then he is dishonest.
Propositional Construct: open to new experiences
According to Range of Convenience
Comprehensive: wide spectrum of events; applicable to many events
Incidental: narrow spectrum; limited application
According to Focus
Core: governs a person’s basic functioning
Peripheral: may be altered without serious modification
Fundamental Postulate
How people predict or anticipates future events determine their behavior
Constructive Alternativism
All of our present interpretations of the universe are subject to revision or replacement; all humans are sciences – their conclusions are subject to change
Change
Why do some people have very impermeable constructs? Because they do not want change. Change brings anxiety, fear, and threat to the person so they would rather maintain their old constructs than to adjust them
Kelly believed that people are strongly motivated to reduce or avoid both anxiety and threat
Anxiety: the experience that one’s construct system is not applicable to events (the persons can’t understand or predict)
Threat: the cognition that imminent comprehensive change is needed in a construct system
Circumspection Phase: person considers several constructs to use in interpreting a situation
Preemptive Phase: person reduces the number of alternative constructs to be used
Control or Choice Phase: person decides what construct to use then plan a course of action
Cognitively Complex Person (healthy personality)
Has a construction system containing constructs that are clearly differentiated
Can draw sharp distinctions between self and others
Has skill in predicting the behavior of others
Constructs are very permeable
Cognitively Simple Person (unhealthy personality)
Has a construction system in which the distinction among constructs is blurred
Has difficulty seeing distinction between self and others
Lacks skills in predicting the behavior of others
Views others in terms of few categories
11 Corollaries
Construction
A person anticipates events by construing their replications
We anticipate by interpreting
Experience
A person’s construction system varies as he successively construes the replication of events
We reconstruct in the light of experience
Dichotomy
A person’s construction system is composed of a finite number of dichotomous constructs
We make bipolar constructs (Self and selfish)
Organization
Each person characteristically evolves, for his convenience in anticipating events, a construction system embracing ordinal relationships between constructs
We developed an organized, hierarchical system of constructs
Range
A construct is convenient for the anticipation of a finite range of events only
Each construct has a certain focus and is not useful for everything
Modulation
The variation in a person’s construction system is limited by the permeability of the constructs within the range of convenience the variants lie
Some constructs we develop are flexible to open experience; others are not
Choice
A person chooses for himself an alternative in a dichotomized construct through which he anticipates the greater possibility for extension and definition of his system
We are free and able to choose among alternative of the construct
Individuality
Persons differ from each other in their construction of events
No 2 people interpret events in the same way
Commonality
To the extent that one person employ a variety of construction subsystems, which are inferentially incompatible with each other
We may be inconsistent within ourselves
Sociality
To the extent that one person construes the construction processes of another, he may play a role in a social process involving the other person
Social interactions entail understanding other constructs