| AVRIL THORNE Department of Psychology
University of California, Santa Cruz
A Kick in the Pants for Personality Psychology
The Cult of Personality Testing.
By Annie Murphy Paul. New York: Free Press, 2004. vi + 302 pp. Paper, $14.00.
Once upon a time, a professor
told me not to fault a Volkswagen for not being a Cadillac. His point
was that users of personality tests sometimes fault the test for not doing
things that the test doesn't claim to do. For example, some people think
that personality tests should be able to X-ray a person's fundamental
desires, capacities, and flaws. Annie Murphy Paul, journalist and author
of the bestselling book The Cult of Personality Testing, chastises
a wide array of personality tests, including the Rorschach, Minnesota
Multiphasic Personality Inventory, Thematic Apperception Test (TAT), Myers-Briggs
Type Indicator, and Big Five, for not being good X-rays of personality.
In particular, she thinks personality tests should help us educate our
children, manage our companies, and understand ourselves. If Paul had
taken my mentor's advice, she wouldnÕt have written this book because
such claims miscast the intentions of these tests. Nonetheless, Paul has
sold a lot of books, so apparently many people find this book compelling.
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