ABSTRACT

The terms mental health, maturity, personality integration, self-actualization have been used by psychologists to represent the realm of the ideal or optimal personality. Originally published in 1974, Professor Richard Coan here describes a method of analysing this domain, and examines the important theoretical implications of his findings. He developed instruments to measure various characteristics, including personal consistency, the experience of control and openness to experience, which are associated with current concepts of sound psychological functioning. A battery containing these instruments was administered to several hundred subjects and analysed. The results, reported here, are enlightening. It was found, for example, that the different characteristics viewed by psychologists as traits of the ideal person do not constitute a unitary pattern. There is no evidence of a general dimension of personality integration or mental health. A number of independent components or factors of sound functioning were isolated. Some desirable traits were discovered to be inversely related to each other, many of these relationships appearing to involve a choice between an open or spontaneous orientation and a more ordered and controlled orientation. The author’s view, fully supported by his findings, is that if people are to achieve maximal realization of their potentials, a clear requisite is the flexible utilization of various modes of experiencing and acting.

chapter Chapter 1|8 pages

Approaches to psychological theory

chapter Chapter 2|11 pages

Concepts of the optimal personality

chapter Chapter 5|26 pages

The scope of awareness

chapter Chapter 6|26 pages

The experience of control

chapter Chapter 7|22 pages

Additional questionnaire instruments

chapter Chapter 8|15 pages

Other measures included in the research battery

chapter Chapter 9|28 pages

An analysis of the battery as a whole

chapter Chapter 10|18 pages

Masculine and feminine modes of functioning

chapter Chapter 11|40 pages

Toward a general theory of the optimal personality