History
of Temperament
Adapted from Linda
V. Berens, Understanding
Yourself and Others®: An Introduction
to the 4 Temperaments-3.0 (Telos Publications,
2006) *Used with permission.
The
human community can be regarded as a system,
holistic in nature, seeking survival.
Throughout the ages, observers of human
behavior have repeatedly identified four
major patterns or configurations of behavior.
Such holistic sorting of behavior patterns
has been recorded for at least twenty-five
centuries.
In
450 b.c., Hippocrates described four such
dispositions he called temperamentsa
choleric temperament with an ease of emotional
arousal and sensitivity; a phlegmatic
temperament with cool detachment and impassivity;
a melancholic temperament with a very
serious, dour, and downcast nature; and
a sanguine temperament full of impulsivity,
excitability, and quick reactivity. During
the Middle Ages, Philippus Paracelsus
described four natures whose behaviors
were said to be influenced by four kinds
of spirits: nymphs, sylphs, gnomes, and
salamanders.
Most
twentieth-century psychologists abandoned
holistic observation of human behavior
for a microscopic examination of parts,
fragments, traits, and so on. To them,
all human beings were basically alike,
and individual differences were due to
chance or conditioning.
Two
German psychologists, Ernst Kretschmer
and Eduard Spränger, were among the
few to continue to view individuals holistically
in terms of patterns. Inspired by their
work, a modern psychologist, David Keirsey,
noted common themes in the various observations
and the consistent tendency of human behavior
to sort itself into four similar patterns.
Linda Berens continues to expand our understanding
of the four temperaments through the unique
contributions; including the core needs,
values, talents, and behaviors of the
four temperament patterns--as illustrated
by The Temperament Targets. These
four major patterns are referred to as
temperaments. They describe the ways human
personality interacts with the environment
to satisfy its needs.
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