Dan P. McAdams’s scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


The Moral Personality
  • Chapter

June 2009

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60 Reads

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44 Citations

Dan P. McAdams

Moral notions are foundational questions that have commanded deep reflection since antiquity, reflection that psychological science cannot evade, because the moral formation of children is a central concern of parents, schools, and communities charged with educating the next generation. In this respect there are few domains of study more crucial than moral psychology and few topics of greater importance than the development of moral self-identity, of moral character, and of the moral personality. This edited volume features the expertise of pre-eminent scholars in moral personality, self, and identity, such as moral philosophers, personality theorists, developmental psychologists, moral personality researchers, social psychologists, and neuroscientists. It brings together cutting-edge work in moral psychology that illustrates an impressive diversity of theoretical perspectives and methodologies and simultaneously points the way toward promising integrative possibilities.

Citations (1)


... A widely recognized psychological framework portrays personality as encompassing five fundamental dimensions, referred to as the Big Five: extraversion, conscientiousness, openness to experience, agreeableness, and neuroticism. Among these dimensions, conscientiousness, openness to experience, and agreeableness have been identified as having a moral dimension, as they align with adopting and practicing a principled ethical ideology(McAdams, 2009;McFerran et al., 2010; see also. These traits have been associated with higher subjective career success, albeit with relatively modest effect sizes(Ng et al., 2005;Ng & Feldman, 2014;Wilmot & Ones, 2022). ...

Reference:

Morality in careers: A systematic review, integration, and ways forward
The Moral Personality
  • Citing Chapter
  • June 2009