THE QUINBY ATTITUDE TRIANGLE BACK

 
MODIFYING   FORCED   CHOICE
 
 
 
   
 
THE  PROBLEM  WITH  ATTITUDES
 
   
   
 
 
   
THE QUINBY ATTITUDE TRIANGLE
Attitudes  are the  hardest  part of a  personality to change
because they are integrated into the Parent - Adult - Child.

“A state of mind or a feeling: disposition, one’s usual mood, temperament, a habitual inclination; a tendency; character.”

 Temperament applies broadly to the sum of a physical,
 emotional, and intellectual characteristics that affect or
 determine a person’s actions and reactions: “Her highly
 strung temperament make her .... capricious ... enchanting”
                                                        (George Bernard Shaw)

Character especially emphasizes moral and ethical qualities: “Education has for its object the formation of character.”

 Personality is the sum of distinctive traits that give a person
 individuality: “The meeting of two personalities is like the contact
 of two chemical substances: if there is any reaction, both are
 transformed”                                                         (Carl Jung)