Gordon Willard 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 rejected both a
psychoanalytic approach to personality, which
he thought often went too deep, and a
behavioral approach, which he thought often did
not go deep enough. He emphasized the uniqueness of each
individual, and the importance of the present context, as opposed
to past history, for understanding the personality.
Allport had a profound and lasting influence on the field of
psychology, even though his work is cited much less often than
other well known figures. Part of his influence stemmed from his
knack for attacking and broadly conceptualizing important and
interesting topics (e.g. rumor, prejudice, religion, traits). Part
of his influence was a result of the deep and lasting impression he
made on his students during his long teaching career, many of whom
went on to have important psychological careers. Among his many
students were
Jerome S. Bruner, Anthony Greenwald,
Stanley Milgram, Leo Postman, Thomas
Pettigrew, and M. Brewster Smith.
Biography
Allport
was born in Montezuma
, Indiana
, the
youngest of four sons of John Edwards and Nellie Edith (Wise)
Allport. His early education was in the public schools of
Cleveland, Ohio, where his family moved when he was six years old.
His father was a country doctor with his clinic and hospital in the
family home. Because of inadequate hospital facilities at the time,
Allport's father actually turned their home into a make-shift
hospital, with patients as well as nurses residing there.
Gordon Allport 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) ."
Allport's mother was a former school teacher, who forcefully
promoted her values of intellectual development and religion. One
of Allport's biographers states "He grew up not only with the
Protestant religion, but also the Protestant work ethic, which
dominated his home life."
Gordon Allport Allport's father, who was Scottish,
shared this outlook, and operated by his own philosophy that "If
every person worked as hard as he could and took only the minimum
financial return required by his families needs, then there would
be just enough wealth to go around."
Biographers describe Allport as a shy and studious boy who lived a
fairly isolated childhood; the young Allport was the subject of
high-school mockery due to a birth defect that left him with only
eight toes. As a teenager, Allport developed and ran his own
printing business, while serving as editor of his high school
newspaper. In 1915, he graduated second in his class at Glenville
High School at the age of eighteen. He earned a scholarship that
allowed him to attend Harvard College, where one of his older
brothers,
Floyd Henry Allport,
was working on his Ph.D. in Psychology
Moving to Harvard was a difficult transition for Allport because
the moral values and climate were so different from his home.
However he earned his A.B. degree in 1919 in Philosophy and
Economics (not psychology). His interest in the convergence of
social psychology and personality psychology was evident in his use
of his spare time at Harvard in social service: conducting a boy's
club in Boston, visiting for the Family Society, serving as a
volunteer probation officer, registering homes for war workers, and
aiding foreign students.
Next he 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 fellowship in 1920 (in
addition to German, Allport remained partially fluent in modern
Greek throughout his life). His first publication, "Personality
Traits: Their Classification and Measurement" in 1921, was
co-authored with his older brother,
Floyd Henry Allport, who became an
important social psychologist. Allport earned his Master's degree
in 1921, studying under Herbert S. Langfeld, and then his Ph.D. in
1922 working with Hugo Münsterberg.
Harvard then awarded Allport a coveted Sheldon Traveling
Fellowship--"a second intellectual dawn," as he later described it.
He spent the first Sheldon year studying with the new Gestalt
School--which fascinated him--in Berlin and Hamburg, Germany; and
then the second year at Cambridge University, England .
Then Allport returned to Harvard as an instructor in Psychology
from 1924 to 1926. He began teaching his course "Personality: It's
Psychological and Social Aspects" in 1924; it was probably the
first course in Personality ever taught in the U.S. During this
time, Allport married Ada Lufkin Gould, who was a clinical
psychologist, and 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.
Gordon W.
Allport was a long time and influential
member of the faculty at Harvard University
from 1930-1967. In 1931, he served on the
faculty committee that established Harvard's Sociology Department.
In the late 1940s, he fashioned an introductory course for the new
Social Relations Department into a rigorous and popular
undergraduate class. 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.
Allport was elected President of the American Psychological
Association in 1939. 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, and benefited from his insights from working
with refugees during World War II. His fifth book, published in
1955 was titled, "Becoming: Basic Considerations for Psychology of
Personality." This book became one of his most widely known
publications. 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. He was seventy years old.
Gordon Allport
Visit with Freud
Allport
told the story in his autobiographical essay in Pattern and
Growth in Personality of his visit as a young, recent college
graduate to the already famous Dr. Sigmund
Freud in Vienna
. To
break the ice upon meeting Freud, Allport recounted how he had met
a boy on the train on the way to Vienna who was afraid of getting
dirty. He refused to sit down near anyone dirty, despite his
mother's reassurances. Allport suggested that perhaps the boy had
learned this dirt phobia from his mother, a very neat and
apparently rather domineering type. After studying Allport for a
minute, Freud asked, "And was that little boy you?"
Allport experienced Freud's attempt to reduce this small bit of
observed interaction to some unconscious episode from his own
remote childhood as dismissive of his current motivations,
intentions and experience. It served as a reminder that
psychoanalysis tends to dig too deeply into
both the past and the unconscious, overlooking in the process the
often more important conscious and immediate aspects of experience.
While Allport never denied that unconscious and historical
variables might have a role to play in human psychology
(particularly in the immature and disordered) his own work would
always emphasize conscious motivations and current context.
Allport's Trait Theory
Allport is known as a "trait" psychologist. One of his early
projects was to go through the dictionary and locate every term
that he thought could describe a person. This is known as the
"lexical hypothesis." From this, he developed a list of 4500 trait
like words. He organized these into three levels of traits.
1.
Cardinal trait - This is the trait that
dominates and shapes a person's behavior. These are rare as most
people lack a single theme that shapes their lives.
2.
Central trait - This is a general
characteristic 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. An example of a central
trait would be honesty.
3.
Secondary trait - These 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.
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 relates 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.
Functional Autonomy
Allport was one of the first researchers to draw a distinction
between
Motive and Drive.He suggested
that a drive formed as a reaction to a motive may outgrow the
motive as a reason. The drive then is autonomous and distinct from
the motive, whether it is instinct or any other. Allport gives the
example of a man who seeks to perfect his task or craft. His
reasons 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. In the words of
Allport, 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
- Personality: A psychological interpretation. (1937)
New York: Holt, Rinehart, & Winston.
- Letters from Jenny. (1965) New York: Harcourt Brace
Jovanovich.
- Becoming: Basic Considerations for a Psychology of
Personality. (1983). New Haven : Yale University. ISBN
0300002645
- The Nature of Prejudice. (1954; 1979). Reading, MA :
Addison-Wesley Pub. Co. ISBN 0201001780
- The Nature of Personality: Selected Papers. (1950;
1975). Westport, CN : Greenwood Press. ISBN 0837174325
- Pattern and Growth in Personality. (1961). Harcourt
College Pub. ISBN 0030108101
- Psychology of Rumor. [with Leo Postman] (1948). Henry
Holt and Co. ASIN B000J52DQU
Secondary literature
- Ian Nicholson, Inventing Personality: Gordon Allport and
the Science of Selfhood, American Psychological Association,
2003, ISBN 155798929X
- 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 1405127503
See also
Notes
- Why should we care about Gordon Allport?
- HJelle, L.A., Ziegler, D.J. (1992). Personality Theories:
Basic Assumptions, Research, and Applications. New York:
McGraw-Hill Book Company.
- HJelle, L.A., Ziegler, D.J. (1992). Personality Theories:
Basic Assumptions, Research, and Applications. New York:
McGraw-Hill Book Company.
- V.W. Hevern (1996-2003). Narrative Psychology: Internet and
Resource Guide.
- Pettigrew, T.F. (1999). Journal of Social Issues,
Fall, 1999
- Bowman, John S. The Cambridge Dictionary of American
Biography. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995) p.
13
- Pettigrew, T.F. (1999). Journal of Social Issues,
Fall, 1999
- Pettigrew, T.F. (1999). Journal of Social Issues,
Fall, 1999
- Allport, Gordon: Pattern and Growth in Personality;
Harcourt College Pub., ISBN 0-03-010810-1
- Allport, G. W. (1937). The American Journal of Psychology,
50, pp. 141-156.
References
- Matlin, MW., (1995) Psychology. Texas: Harcourt Brace College
Publishers.
External links