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Introduction to the Four Temperaments
by Laraine Bennett
The temperaments…isn’t that sort of like
Catholic astrology? This is a typical
question when serious Catholics first hear
about the classic four temperaments. Yet the
concept of temperament is neither pop
psychology nor self-help gimmick; in fact,
it has a long and venerable tradition within
Catholic spirituality and moral theology.
Many saints and great spiritual writers —
such as Saint Francis de Sales, Saint Thomas
Aquinas, the Very Reverend Adolphe Tanquerey,
S.S. D.D., as well as contemporary
theologian Jordan Aumann, O.P. — discuss the
concept of temperament and how if affects
one’s human as well as spiritual formation.
The concept of the four temperaments —
choleric, melancholic, sanguine, and
phlegmatic—dates back 2,000 years to
Hippocrates, the “father of medical
science". He held that differences in
personalities were related to an
individual’s predominant bodily fluid—
hence, the rather unappealing names!
Choleric: yellow bile from the liver
Sanguine: blood from the heart
Melancholic: black bile from the
kidneys
Phlegmatic: phlegm from the lungs
The “sanguine” temperament was thought to be
eager and optimistic; the “melancholic”
reticent and somewhat doleful; the
“choleric” passionate; and the “phlegmatic”
calm.
Though the concept of the four types had
been around since the early Greeks, the use
of the word “temperament” (from the Latin
temperamentum, or “mixture”) first came into
use in the seventeenth century. In the
history of the Church, the concept of
temperament was long used as a means to aid
spiritual development through growth in
self-knowledge. Understanding one’s self
required understanding the whole person—his
emotions and passions, natural tendencies
and reactions—as well as his virtues and
spiritual gifts. The great Doctor of the
Church, Saint Thomas Aquinas, wrote about
temperament and its relation to virtue in
his Summa Theologica. Spiritual directors
have long understood that one would be
better able to identify not only one’s
natural virtues, but also those virtues
which may be more difficult to attain and
the areas in which one would be tempted to
vice—depending upon one’s God-given
temperament.
In the 1920s Swiss psychologist Carl Jung
advanced the theory that different
personality types approached the outside
world in distinct manners, and could be
clearly categorized accordingly. Isabel
Briggs Myers (1897-1979) spent forty years
refining the Jungian typology into the
Myers-Briggs Type Indicator, with its
sixteen different types of personality. The
Myers-Briggs Type Indicator, or MBTI, is
considered to be one of the most widely used
personality inventories available, and has
achieved great popular success.
Curiously enough, from Hippocrates to Isabel
Briggs Myers, and even up until today, the
concept of four basic temperaments
underlying more complex personality theories
has remained virtually unchanged! David
Keirsey , Ph.D. author of the Keirsey
Temperament Sorter avows that 2,000 years of
consistency in terms of temperament
distinctions is no accident. These
distinctions “reflect a fundamental pattern
in the warp and woof of the fabric of human
nature” (Keirsey 26).1
Each one of us is uniquely and predominantly
one of the temperaments — choleric,
phlegmatic, melancholic, and sanguine. After
more than 2,000 years of intervening medical
and psychological advancement, the concept
of temperament itself — and in particular
the classic four divisions — is still
referenced by contemporary psychologists,
educators, and spiritual writers. Today,
Christians all over the world are
re-discovering the value and wisdom of this
most ancient tool for understanding
ourselves and others.
(1) David Keirsey , Please Understand Me
II. 1996-2005, Prometheus Nemesis Book
Company. p 26 ff.
Copyright © 2005, Catholic Match, LLC. All
Rights Reserved. Used with permission. For
more information on the Temperaments, visit:
www.catholicmatch.com &
www.temperaments.catholicmatch.com
Laraine Bennett is a freelance writer with
articles published in Catholic Faith &
Family, Ligourian, New Oxford Review, and
the National Catholic Register. Together
with her husband, Art, she co-authored
The Temperament God Gave You (2005 Sophia
Institute Press). Laraine has a BA in
Philosophy from Santa Clara University and
an MA in Philosophy from the University of
California, Santa Barbara. Laraine and her
husband have been married for 28 years and
have lived in California and Germany, and
are presently living in Northern Virginia.
They have four children -- one of each
temperament. |
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