Hans Jürgen Eysenck (March
4, 1916 – September 4, 1997) was a British
psychologist of German
origin, best remembered for his work on intelligence and personality, though he worked in a
wide range of areas. At the time of his death, Eysenck was
the living psychologist most frequently cited in science
journals.
Life and work
Hans
Eysenck was born in Berlin
, Germany
, but moved
to England
as a young
man in the 1930s because of his opposition to the Nazi party. "My hatred of Hitler and the
Nazis, and all they stood for, was so overwhelming that no argument
could counter it." Eysenck was the founding editor of the journal
Personality
and Individual Differences, and authored over 50 books and
over 900 academic articles. He aroused intense debate with his
controversial dealing with variation in
IQ among
racial groups
(see
race and
intelligence).
Eysenck
was Professor of Psychology at the Institute of
Psychiatry
from 1955 to 1983. He received his PhD
from the Department of Psychology at University
College London
(UCL) under the supervision of Professor Sir
Cyril Burt with whom he had a tumultuous
professional relationship throughout his working life. He
was a major contributor to the modern scientific theory of
personality and a brilliant teacher. who helped found treatment for
mental illnesses.
His son
Michael Eysenck is also a
noted psychology professor.
Hans Eysenck died of a brain tumor in a London hospice in
1997.
Examples of publications in which Eysenck's views have roused
controversy include (chronologically):
- A paper in the 1950s [26710] concluding that available data "fail to
support the hypothesis that psychotherapy facilitates recovery from
neurotic disorder".
- A chapter in Uses and Abuses of Psychology (1953)
entitled "What is wrong with psychoanalysis".
- Race, Intelligence and Education (1971) (in the US:
The IQ Argument)
- Sex, Violence and the Media (1978).
- Astrology — Science or Superstition? (1982)
- Smoking, Personality and Stress (1991)
A portion of Eysenck's work was funded from the
Pioneer Fund, an organization that funds
hereditarian research., for which
Eysenck was criticised .
By far the
most acrimonious of the debates has been that over the role of
genetics in IQ
differences (see intelligence
quotient#Genetics vs environment), which led to Eysenck
famously being punched on the nose
during a talk at the London School of Economics
.
Eysenck’s attitude to science was summarised in his autobiography
Rebel with a Cause (Transaction Publishers (1997), ISBN
1-56000-938-1): "I always felt that a scientist owes the world only
one thing, and that is the truth as he sees it. If the truth
contradicts deeply held beliefs, that is too bad. Tact and
diplomacy are fine in international relations, in politics, perhaps
even in business; in science only one thing matters, and that is
the facts."
Eysenck and the genetics of personality
In 1951, Eysenck's first empirical study into the
genetics of personality was published. It was an
experiment carried out with his student and associate
Donald Prell, from 1948 to 1951, in which
identical (monozygotic) and fraternal (dizygotic) twins, ages 11
and 12, were given tests that were to do with neuroticism. It is
described in detail it an article published in the
Journal of Mental Science.
Eysenck and Prell concluded: "that the factor of neuroticism is not
a statistical artifact, but constitutes a biological unit which is
inherited as a whole....neurotic
predisposition is to a large extent
hereditarily determined."
Eysenck's model of personality (P–E–N)
The two personality dimensions,
Extraversion and
Neuroticism, were described in his 1947 book
Dimensions of Personality. It is common practice in
personality psychology to refer to the dimensions by the first
letters, E and N.
E and N provided a 2-dimensional space to describe individual
differences in behaviour. An analogy can be made to how latitude
and longitude describe a point on the face of the earth. Also,
Eysenck noted how these two dimensions were similar to the
four personality types first proposed by
the Greek physician
Hippocrates.
- High N and High E = Choleric type
- High N and Low E = Melancholic type
- Low N and High E = Sanguine type
- Low N and Low E = Phlegmatic type
The third dimension,
psychoticism, was
added to the model in the late 1970s, based upon collaborations
between Eysenck and his wife, Sybil B. G. Eysenck, who is the
current editor of
Personality and Individual
Differences.
The major strength of Eysenck's model was to provide detailed
theory of the causes of personality. For example, Eysenck proposed
that extraversion was caused by variability in cortical arousal:
"introverts are characterized by higher levels of activity than
extraverts and so are chronically more cortically aroused than
extraverts". While it seems counterintuitive to suppose that
introverts are
more aroused than extraverts, the putative
effect this has on behaviour is such that the introvert seeks lower
levels of stimulation. Conversely, the extravert seeks to heighten
his or her arousal to a more favorable level (as predicted by the
Yerkes-Dodson Law) by increased
activity, social engagement and other stimulation-seeking
behaviors.
Comparison with other theories
The major alternative to Eysenck's three-factor model of
personality is a model that makes use of five broad traits, often
called the Big Five model (see
big five personality traits)
(Costa & McCrae, 1985). The traits in the Big Five are as
follows:
- Openness to experience
- Conscientiousness
- Extraversion
- Agreeableness
- Neuroticism
Extraversion and Neuroticism in the Big Five are similar to
Eysenck's traits of the same name. However, what Eysenck calls the
trait of Psychoticism corresponds to two traits in the Big Five
model: Conscientiousness and Agreeableness. Eysenck's personality
system did not address Openness to experience. He argued that his
approach was a better description of personality (Eysenck, 1992a;
1992b).
Another important model of personality is that of
Jeffrey Alan Gray, a former student of
his.
Psychometric scales relevant to Eysenck's theory
Eysenck's theory of personality is closely linked with the scales
that he and his co-workers developed. These include the
Maudsley Medical
Questionnaire,
Eysenck
Personality Inventory (EPI),
Eysenck Personality
Questionnaire (EPQ) and
Sensation Seeking Scale (developed
in conjunction with Marvin Zuckerman). The Eysenck Personality
Profiler (EPP) breaks down different facets of each trait
considered in the model. There has been some debate about whether
these facets should include impulsivity as a facet of
extraversion as Eysenck declared in his early
work; or
psychoticism. Eysenck declared
for the latter, in later work.
Eysenck's later work
In 1994 he was one of 52 signatories on "
Mainstream Science on
Intelligence," an editorial written by
Linda Gottfredson and published in the
Wall Street Journal,
which defended the findings on
race and intelligence in
The Bell Curve.
Eysenck made early contributions to fields such as
personalityby express and explicit
commitment to a very rigorous adherenceto scientific methodology,
as Eysenck believed that
scientific
methodology was required for progress in personality
psychology. He used, for example,
factor
analysis, a statistical method, to support his personality
model. An example is
Inheritance of Neuroticism: An
Experimental Study, quoted above. His early work showed
Eysenck to be an especially strong critic of
psychoanalysis as a form of therapy,
preferring
behaviour therapy.
Despite this strongly scientific interest, Eysenck did not shy, in
later work, from giving attention to
parapsychology and
astrology. Indeed, he believed that empirical
evidence supported the existence of paranormal abilities.
Selected works
Eysenck and his wife Sybil
- Dimensions of Personality (1947)
- The Scientific Study of Personality (1952)
- The Structure of Human Personality (1952) and later
editions
- Uses and Abuses of Psychology (1953)
- The Psychology of Politics (1954)
- Psychology and the Foundations of Psychiatry
(1955)
- Sense and Nonsense in Psychology (1956)
- The Dynamics of Anxiety and Hysteria (1957)
- Perceptual Processes and Mental Illnesses (1957) with
G. Granger and J. C. Brengelmann
- Manual of the Maudsley Personality Inventory
(1959)
- Handbook of Abnormal Psychology (1960) editor, later
editions
- Experiments in Personality (1960) two volumes,
editor
- Behaviour Therapy and Neuroses (1960) editor
- Know Your Own I.Q. (1962)
- Experiments with Drugs (1963) editor
- Experiments in Motivation (1964) editor
- Crime and Personality (1964) and later editions
- Manual of the Eysenck Personality Inventory (1964)
with S. B. G. Eysenck
- The Causes and Cures of Neuroses (1965) with S.
Rachman
- Fact and Fiction in Psychology (1965)
- Smoking, Health and Personality (1965)
- Check Your Own I.Q. (1966)
- The Effects of Psychotherapy (1966)
- The Biological Basis of Personality (1967)
- Eysenck, H.J. & Eysenck, S.B.G. (1969). Personality
Structure and Measurement. London: Routledge.
- Readings in Extraversion/Introversion (1971) three
volumes
- Race, Intelligence and Education (1971) in US as
The IQ Argument
- Psychology is about People (1972)
- Lexicon de Psychologie (1972) three volumes, with W.
Arnold and R. Meili
- The Inequality of Man (1973)
- Eysenck on Extraversion (1973) editor
- The Measurement of Intelligence (1973) editor
- The Experimental Study of Freudian theories (1973)
with G. D. Wilson
- Case Histories in Behaviour Therapy (1974) editor
- Know Your Own Personality (1975) with G. D.
Wilson
- Manual of the Eysenck Personality Questionnaire (1975)
with S. B. G. Eysenck
- A Textbook of Human Psychology (1976) with G. D.
Wilson
- Sex and Personality (1976)
- The Measurement of Personality (1976) editor
- Eysenck, H.J. & Eysenck, S.B.G. (1976). Psychoticism as
a Dimension of Personality. London: Hodder and Stoughton.
- Reminiscence, Motivation and Personality (1977) with
C. D. Frith
- You and Neurosis (1977)
- Die Zukunft der Psychologie (1977)
- The Psychological Basis of Ideology (1978) editor,
with G. D. Wilson
- Sex Violence and the Media (1978) with D. Nias
- The Structure and Measurement of Intelligence
(1979)
- The Psychology of Sex (1979) with G. D. Wilson
- The Causes and Effects of Smoking (1980)
- A Model for Personality (1981) editor
- Mindwatching (1981) with M. W. Eysenck, and later
editions
- The Battle for the Mind (1981) with L. J. Kamin, in US as The Intelligence
Controversy
- Personality, Genetics and Behaviour (1982)
- Explaining the Unexplained (1982) with Carl
Sargent
- H.J. Eysenck & D.K.B. Nias, Astrology: Science or
Superstition? Penguin Books (1982) ISBN 0-14-022397-5
- A Model for Intelligence (1982) editor
- Know Your Own Psi-Q (1983) with Carl Sargent
- …'I Do'. Your Happy Guide to Marriage (1983)
with B. N. Kelly
- Personality and Individual Differences: A Natural Science
Approach (1985) with M. W. Eysenck
- Decline and Fall of the Freudian Empire (1985)
- Rauchen und Gesundheit (1987)
- Personality Dimensions and Arousal (1987) editor, with
J. Strelau
- Theoretical Foundations of Behaviour Therapy (1988)
editor, with I. Martin
- The Causes and Cures of Criminality (1989) with G. H.
Gudjonsson
- Genes, Culture and Personality: An Empirical Approach
(1989) with L. Eaves and N. Martin
- Suggestion and Suggestibility (1989) editor, with V.
A. Gheorghiu, P. Netter, and R. Rosenthal
- Intelligence: A New Look (1998)
- Eysenck, H.J. (1992). A reply to Costa and McCrae. P or A and C
— the role of theory. Personality and Individual
Differences, 13, 867–868.
- Eysenck, H.J. (1992). Four ways five factors are not basic.
Personality and Individual Differences, 13, 667–673.
References
Costa, P. T., & McCrae, R. R. (1998). NEO PI-R inventaire de
personnalité — Révisé. Paris: Edition de Centre de Psychologie
Appliquée.
External links