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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 15 page research paper that examines the model of personality development formulated by British psychologist Hans Eysenck, who posited that certain behavioral characteristics have a biological base. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
15 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_khhaneys.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
discipline, and the origins of personality have been a topic for debate in philosophy since the time of the ancient Greeks. Why does one person stay cool and calm in
a crisis, while the individual next to him panics and acts rashly? Why are some people painfully shy, while others are outgoing? Is this due to conditioning and differences in
environment, or does it have something to do with the way that their bodies react to stress? British psychologist Hans Eysenck believes that the root cause for such differences
is not how people are nurtured, and, in fact, has nothing to do with differences in environment, but is, rather, an indication of physiological differences that can be traced to
the sympathetic nervous system. Eysenck, has long postulated that, while environmental influences play a role in personality development, genetically determined properties of the nervous system form the foundation
for individual differences in personality development (Holme, 1972). Eysenck was a behaviorist in his orientation toward psychology (he passed away in 1997), which suggests that he believed that conditioning could
alter behavior. However, he posited that personality differences evolve out of genetic inheritance (Boeree, 2002). Consequently, Eysenck was also interested in what is generally referred to as "temperament" (Boeree,
2002). His theory states that an individual inherits a tendency to respond to the environment in a certain manner; however, the precise nature
of the behaviors that the individual will learn to demonstrate is dependent upon the variety of environmental influences to which that individual is exposed.. In other words, even Eysenck did
not preach that heredity is destiny, that an inherited proclivity toward a certain type of behavior made the manifestation of that behavior inevitable. But, he did argue that to
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