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Personality Theory

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Title: Personality Theory


1
Personality Theory
  • Chapter 10 Existentialism R.D. Laing

2
An Introduction to Existentialism
  • European existentialism grew out of the terrible
    threats to life experienced in WWII, and the
    growing interest and concern about the meaning of
    life.
  • Views that represent a radical alternative to a
    science of personality.
  • Phenomenal experience and the belief that humans
    can choose what they wish to be.
  • Rejects the very idea of psychological
    determinism.

3
  • Major European existentialists include
  • Ludwig Binswanger
  • Medard Boss
  • Viktor Frankl
  • Their philosophical fathers
  • Søren Kierkegaard
  • Martin Heidegger
  • Albert Camus
  • Jean-Paul Sartre
  • Paul Tillich

4
Ronald David Laing
  • Laing was born in 1927 in a working class
    district of Glasgow
  • An only child
  • His father was an electrical engineer, his mother
    was an embittered housewife
  • He led a contented but strict upbringing
  • An avid reader, he took up Kierkegaard as a
    schoolboy.

5
  • In 1944 he obtained a scholarship to Glasgow
    University to study medicine
  • He failed his exams and had to re-take them 6
    months later
  • He went on to become a psychiatrist in the
    British Army (1951-3)
  • Experiences as a hospital psychiatrist disturbed
    him.

6
  • He held hospital appointments and worked at the
    Tavistock Clinic in London (4 years of
    psychoanalysis at this time)
  • Laing developed an innovative experiment in the
    treatment of schizophrenia (1965-71)
  • At Kingsley Hall, doctors and patients lived
    together in a therapeutic community.

7
  • Studied yoga and meditation in Ceylon and India
  • A biopolitician as well as psychiatrist in his
    last years.
  • He died in 1989.
  • Among Laings books
  • The Divided Self (1960)
  • Self and Others (1961)

8
  • Sanity, Madness and the Family (1964)
  • The Politics of Experience and the Bird of
    Paradise (1967)
  • Every university student knew about this book
  • Knots (1970)
  • Wisdom, Madness and Folly The Making of a
    Psychiatrist (1985)

9
Emphases and Major Concepts
  • Existential phenomenology characterizes the
    experience of peoples worlds and of themselves
  • Experiences in the context of being-in-the-world.
  • We cant use abstract, objective, clinical terms
    these are it-terms.
  • Terrifying personal experiences such as
    schizophrenia cannot be understood outside the
    persons experience.

10
  • Ontological security versus ontological
    insecurity
  • The ontologically insecure person is exposed to
    extreme anxiety that can take 3 forms
  • Engulfment fear of loss of autonomy leads to
    isolation
  • Implosion the person feels empty and fearful of
    reality exploding inward on him or her
  • Petrification and depersonalization feeling
    empty, turned to stone not feeling oneself a
    person

11
Implications
  • Schizophrenia as a model for the distortion of
    experience
  • Laing did not attribute a cause of schizophrenia.
  • His concern was the experience of the
    schizophrenic person.

12
  • The disorder is a creative solution to an
    unendurable experience
  • Not a good solution, but respect for the person
    and his experience is required.
  • Achieving full-fledged being-in-the-world is a
    big challenge.
  • Existentialists dont want to fool you.

13
Research
  • There really isnt any its against the
    existentialists religion.

14
Existentialism in Perspective
  • Its humanistic perspective, concern for meaning,
    and stress on personal responsibility are
    admirable.
  • Phenomenology may help to understand individual
    experience.
  • It is not personality theory.
  • Existentialists disdain psychological causality.

15
Take-Home Messages
  • Existentialism arose out of the terror and doubt
    about the meaning of life brought by WWII.
  • A phenomenological method
  • Emphasis on individual experience
  • Opposed to theory and determinism

16
  • Philosophical founders of the movement
  • Kierkegaard, Heidegger, Camus, Sartre, Tillich
  • R.D. Laing
  • Born to a working-class Glasgow family in 1927
  • A contented childhood
  • Voracious reader
  • Medical school at Glasgow University
  • Army service as a psychiatrist

17
  • A succession of hospital psychiatrist positions,
    including the Tavistock Clinic in London
  • Participant in a failed therapeutic experiment
    with schizophrenics
  • A biopolitician for the rest of his career

18
  • Emphases and Major Concepts
  • Existential phenomenology the nature of
    individual experience of the world and oneself
  • No it-terms
  • Ontological security and insecurity
  • Engulfment, Implosion, and Petrification and
    depersonalization
  • Schizophrenia and an unlivable world

19
  • Implications
  • For Laing, its schizophrenic experience, not
    etiology
  • A creative solution to unendurable experience
  • Being-in-the-world aint easy
  • No research by existentialists

20
  • Existentialism in perspective
  • Commendable humanism, concern for finding
    meaning, stress on personal responsibility
  • Not personality theory
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