Are we "prisoners of our personality"? Explain

What will be an ideal response?

Answer: We are not prisoners of our personality. Our personality may impact how we would usually behave, but we can modify our personality to some extent.

Psychology

You might also like to view...

Danny is Navajo. He learned the Navajo language when he was very young from his grandmother. When he started school he had to learn English and his ability to speak Navajo had declined by third grade. This is an example of

A) subtractive bilingualism. B) additive bilingualism. C) code switching. D) syntactical bootstrapping.

Psychology

Four-month-old Barry is shown an orange circle. He looks at it for eight seconds. Upon successive showings, Barry's interest falls with each repeated trial until he looks for only two seconds

When a purple circle is substituted, Barry looks at the object for nine seconds. From this test, one may conclude that Barry A) prefers the color purple over the color orange. B) is able to discern the difference between orange and purple. C) is unable to discern the difference between orange and purple. D) prefers the color orange over the color purple.

Psychology