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for gordon allport, "the dynamic orginization within the individual of those psychophysical systems that determine his unique adjustments to the environment" |
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innate emotional aspects of personality |
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a characteristic of a person that makes a person unique, with a unique style of adapting to stimuli in the world |
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a trait that characterizes only one person who has it (i.e., a trait considered from the idiographic point of view) |
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a trait characterizing many people (i.e., a trait considered from the nomothetic point of view) |
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a trait that only one person has (also called individual trait) |
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traits concerned with the style or tempo of a person's behavior |
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one of the half dozen or so traits that best describe a particular person |
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a trait that influences a limited range of behaviors. |
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a pervasive personality trait that dominates nearly everything a person does |
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a trait's independence of its developmental origins |
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unifying philosophy of life |
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an attitude or set of values, often religious, that gives coherence and meaning to life |
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the Latin phrase indicating that a person makes a unified whole out of many diverse aspects of personality |
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all aspects of a person that make for unity; a person's sense of self or ego |
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objects or people that help define a person's identity or sense of self |
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a stage in middle childhood in which problem-solving ability is important to one's sense of self |
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effort based on a sense of selfhood or identity |
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a stage in adulthood in which a person integrates the self into a unified whole |
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extrinsic religious orientation |
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attitude in which religion is seen as a means to a person's other goals (such as status or security) |
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intrinsic religioius orientation |
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attitude in which religion is accepted for its own sake rather than as a means to an end |
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considering concepts from diverse theories, without making careful selection from and evaluation of these concepts |
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