1st Edition

The Scientific Analysis of Personality

Edited By Raymond B. Cattell Copyright 1965
    400 Pages
    by Routledge

    400 Pages
    by Routledge

    Written by one of the world's most eminent personality theorists, this book provides a simply written, comprehensive introduction to recent research about personality structure and the nature of individual differences. The Scientific Analysis of Personality offers the essence of Cattell's work on personality testing, reviewing the experimental, quantitative and statistical research which with the aid of the electronic computer is now producing remarkable new discoveries.

    After preliminary surveys of the methods by which personality can be studied and of hereditary influences on personality, the author expounds the core of his work on factor analysis and source traits of excitability, dominance, ego and super-ego strength. Chapters on the techniques of objective measurement, the motivation of personality, and the ways in which learning and growing up can be scientifically assessed conclude in a final overview of the wider social implications of personality measurement.

    Simplicity of presentation combined with a useful glossary of terms will encourage students and layman alike in the analysis of personality. The book will serve as a basic reference to current research methods for psychologists, sociologists, psychiatrists, educators and all engaged in mental testing.

    1: By What Methods Can Personality Be Studied? 2: The Formation of Personality by Environment and Heredity; 3: Personality Structure: The Larger Dimensions; 4: Further Traits, and Their Integration; 5: The Techniques of Objective Personality Measurement; 6: Finer Issues in Personality Measurement:States, Instruments, Roles; 7: The Main Features of Our Dynamic Structure; 8: The Clinical Measurement of Conflict and Maladjustment; 9: Analysis of the Concept of Integration of Personality; 10: The Development of Personality; 11: Personality Testing and the School Child; 12: Personality Measurement and the Solution of Some Social Problems

    Biography

    J. Peter Rothe