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This book features coverage of influential people in personality and intelligence, and examines the academic and scientific contribution they made to the field. The author uses a thematic structure to explore the background, interconnections, controversies and 'conversations' related to these individuals throughout history.
List of contents
Dedication
Acknowledgment
Preface
- Francis Galton (1822-1911)
‘Hereditary Genius’
- Sigmund Freud (1856-1939)
"I can most highly recommend the Gestapo to everyone"
- Alfred Binet (1857-1911)
‘The constructionist’
- Charles Edward Spearman (1863-1945)
‘The intelligence factor’
- Goddard, Henry Herbert (1866-1957)
"As luck would have it"
- Alfred Alder (1870-1937)
‘The individualist’
- Jung, Carl Gustav (1875-1961)
‘We cannot change anything unless we accept it’
- Hermann Rorschach (1884-1922)
‘Faces staring back at us’
- Karen Horney (1885-1952)
‘Upending Freud’
- Henry Alexander Murray (1893-1988)
‘Revealing the personal narrative’
- David Wechsler (1896-1981)
‘Factorial analysis alone is not the answer’
- Katherine Cook-Briggs & Isabel Myers-Briggs
‘The indicator’ Myers-Briggs (1897-1980)
Cook-Briggs (1875-1968)
- John Carlyle Raven June (1902-1970)
‘Elegant design’
- Hathaway, Starke Rosecrans (1903–1984)
‘The Minnesota Normals’
- Raymond Bernard Cattell (1905-1998)
Psychology: "describing things which everyone knows in language which no one understands"
- George Alexander Kelly (1905-1967)
A multi-dimensional man
- Hans Jurgen Eysenck (1916-1997)
The truth as he sees it
- Arthur Jensen (1923-2012)
A King among Men
- Walter Mischel (1930-2018)
Oh, what a lovely war
- Lewis Robert Goldberg (1932-)
The Big-5, OCEAN and the language of personality
- Howard Gardner (1943–)
"One of a kind"
- John Philippe Rushton (1943-2012)
The incendiary device
- Peter Francis Saville (1946-)
‘Global Gold Standard’
- Daniel Goleman (1946)
Emotionally intelligent References
Index
About the author
Alex Forsythe is Head of Certification for the Association for Business Psychology, Honorary Senior Lecturer at the University of Liverpool and Head of Psychology at the University of Wolverhampton. Among her various accomplishments, she is a Chartered Occupational Psychologist, BPS Specialist in test use, and in 2018 was awarded both Principal Fellowship of the Higher Education Academy and the prestigious National Teaching Fellowship. With extensive organisational experience working at senior levels in the private, public and voluntary sectors, Alex’s specialisms include improving work performance through goal setting and by helping individuals develop healthy self-regulatory behaviours and relationships with feedback.
Summary
This book features coverage of influential people in personality and intelligence, and examines the academic and scientific contribution they made to the field. The author uses a thematic structure to explore the background, interconnections, controversies and ?conversations? related to these individuals throughout history.
Additional text
"This book lifts the curtain to explore the backgrounds and personal lives of some influential psychologists in the fields of personality, intelligence and their measurement. This brief book helps us understand how and why their backgrounds and private lives may have influenced their theories--and the controversies which frequently erupted. The book is engagingly written with a wry, light touch, such as describing Eysenck’s 'physics envy'. It provides fascinating background to some influential theories and will appeal to both specialists and non-specialists." - Colin Cooper, School of Psychology, Queen’s University, Belfast.