A Mangled Angle on Personality

Q: What happens when pop psychology, ancient "wisdom," and geometry meet?

A: You get the Enneagram, a figure that purports to explain human personality. It places each of us in one of nine personality types, from the sensitive Individualist (type 4) to the challenging Leader (type 8).

Q: A bit like astrology, eh?

A: There's no stargazing here. Proponents say that understanding your type is a valuable way for managers to maximize their potential. Maybe that's why a Stanford Business School course on leadership concentrates on Enneagrams.

Q: Sounds like this Enneagram could be a handy corporate tool.

A: Not so fast: Since the Enneagram was resurrected from the ancients 25 years ago, there have been only two published studies on it.

Q: So the whole thing is bogus?

A: It's too soon to tell. One study classified subjects into types and found that those classifications held years later. But that's no surprise: The broader aspects of personality are largely stable during adulthood, says Northwestern University's Dan McAdams, Ph.D., author of a leading personality text. The big question is whether Enneagrams reflect psychological reality -- and the evidence is not compelling. "There's a reason personality psychologists haven't embraced this:' says McAdams. "It just doesn't have any scientific basis."

Q: But surely personality types exist -- we all describe others as loners, prima donnas, and so on.

A: Psychologists have long tried to categorize personality. The most scientific model, the Big Five, focuses on traits like extroversion and conscientiousness. But it makes no attempt to stuff us into neatly labeled jars; instead, it recognizes that each aspect of personality exists in a spectrum encompassing a thousand shades of gray. The Enneagram model remains pure speculation.

Q: So why have so many businesses latched on to it?

A: Companies have always embraced psychological fads in their perpetual battle to motivate workers.

Q: You sound pretty doubtful about the whole thing.

A: Hey, I'm a type 5 (the Thinker). Skepticism is our middle name.

Tags: ancient wisdom, aspect of personality, aspects of personality, business, corporate tool, enneagram, extroversion, human personality, individualist, leader type, northwestern university, personality, personality psychologists, personality types, pop psychology, psychological reality, shades of gray, stanford business school, test, thousand shades of gray, type

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