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comment by HedonicTreadmiller
HedonicTreadmiller  ·  3447 days ago  ·  link  ·    ·  parent  ·  post: Let's Quit It with the Introvert/Extrovert Nonsense

Thanks for sharing, I really enjoyed reading this article. I think your best point relating to the article is that other personality traits are better understood on a spectrum. When I took a fairly advanced personality psychology course a few years ago, we started the semester off covering the "big 5" personality traits (https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Five_personality_traits). They are:

-Openness to experience

-Conscientiousness

-Extraversion

-Agreeableness

-Neuroticism

Basically, the principal we were taught is that a persons personality can be generally summed up as a combination of where they land on the spectrum on each of these traits. My professor stressed that there was no "better" or "worse" place to land on each of the scales, however some combinations create a disposition for specific psychological disorders.

For example, most people would see conscientiousness as a very desirable trait in today's society. Someone high on the conscientiousness scale might be labeled as a perfectionist, very organized and attentive to detail (all good things, right?). Unfortunately, if they also landed low on Neuroticism, meaning their emotions were inconsistent/unstable, they would have a high predisposition to Generalized Anxiety Disorder.

This is where the introverted stereotype comes in of the weird, antisocial basement dweller who never gets out of the house. It is not just where a person falls on the extaversion spectrum, but how that trait works hand in hand with other traits. Generally, those recluse-type people are low on agreeableness as well.

To sum it up, personality traits are never black or white; individuals are complex and to label them otherwise would be foolish.





btcprox  ·  3446 days ago  ·  link  ·  

    a person's personality can be generally summed up as a combination of where they land on the spectrum on each of these traits. ... no "better" or "worse" place to land on each of the scales, however some combinations create a disposition for specific psychological disorders.

    ... It is not just where a person falls on the extraversion spectrum, but how that trait works hand in hand with other traits.

Right, after all a personality is the layered and complex combo of numerous identifiable traits, and then some. Picking out a few traits would only reveal a little fragment of the person's psyche.

Maybe identifying oneself as part of a binary - or generally part of a group of a polytomy - just gives one a sense of belonging and relief, knowing that he/she is not alone in the challenges faced because of who he/she is.

cgod  ·  3446 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Do most people view being a perfectionist a good thing? I certainly don't, most perfectionist are annoying and slow to accomplish tasks. I put way more stock in getting it done than getting it perfect as long as things are getting done well. I think you learn a lot more when you can accept mistakes and imperfection and then repeat a task to learn from another round of mistakes. Only after being completely bollucks a bunch should you take a run at perfection.

btcprox  ·  3445 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Perhaps because perfectionism is often seen as the direct antithesis to mediocrity. "Surely being perpetually unsatisfied and constantly striving for more improvement, is better than settling for a state that's below excellence!"

But of course it's best to learn the fundamentals before heading for the peak. Whether that be from your own mistakes or from others.