Essay Comparing Paul Costa And Mccrae

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Paul Costa and Robert McCrae
One of the major theories of personality is the trait theory. In trait theory, the measurement of traits gives insight into personality. A trait is a habitual pattern of behavior, thought and emotion. As the theory progressed many psychologists began to use five factors to categorize numerous traits. These researchers determined that these factors were fundamental dimension of personality (McCrae & John, 1990). Two such psychologists were Paul Costa and Robert McCrae and their version is very well known. The acronym OCEAN is used to identify Costa’s and McCrae’s Big Five personality traits (“The Five Factor Model”, 2016).
Introduction To The Theory
Costa’s and McCrae’s Big Five personality traits, or their …show more content…

They believed that the five factors were largely inherited and unfold over time (“The Five Factor Model of Personality”, 2016). Costa and McCrae also believed that personality was relatively stable. They maintained that personality is basically stable after the age of thirty (Ardelt, 2003). They also expressed the belief that the five factors are influenced little by experience and that they influence the development of the rest of personality (“The Five Factor Model of Personality”, 2016). The increase or decrease of traits is slight. For example, neuroticism and extroversion tend to decline slightly with age, while agreeableness increases with age, peaking between fifty to seventy years (“The Five Factor Model”, 2016).
There is criticism of the Five Factor Model as well as Trait theory in general. The most common criticism is that the theory is more descriptive but does not explain or predict behavior. Regardless, “according to Costa and McCrae, ‘personality is not a product of the life course … but a robust and resilient set of dispositions within the individual that themselves help shape the life course. People are not mere pawns of the environment, but active agents who steadfastly pursue their own style of being throughout life.’”(Ardelt, 2003,

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