Beyond the illusion of personality: Part I: A comment on self-pathology

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

An enormous amount of papers in the field of personality disorder tend to fall prey to a cognitive bias that I have termed ''the illusion of personality (pathology)'': that is, the tendency to view all individual differences as personality differences (and their deviations from the norm as personality problems). In this brief paper, I illustrate this error using a recent example: namely, a study that found evidence for ''self-pathology'' being implicated in mood disorders, yet erroneously concluded that this is evidence for ''personality pathology'' being implicated in mood disorders. It is important to emphasize that my critique does not aim to be a judgemental nit-picking of this particular study. Instead, my critique aims to highlight how widespread this bias is in the hopes of making research on personality (pathology) more scientifically accurate and humane.

Article activity feed