1. Revisiting the hierarchical structure of the 24 VIA character strengths: Three global dimensions may suffice to capture their essence
- Author
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Clemens M. Lechner, Matthias Bluemke, and Melanie V. Partsch
- Subjects
050103 clinical psychology ,Social Psychology ,Structure (category theory) ,050109 social psychology ,Global dimension ,Personality structure ,ddc:150 ,Psychology ,Messung ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,VIA ,character strengths ,higher-order factors ,metatraits ,personality structure ,Social sciences, sociology, anthropology ,Erhebungstechniken und Analysetechniken der Sozialwissenschaften ,Sozialwissenschaften, Soziologie ,05 social sciences ,Individual difference ,Epistemology ,Methods and Techniques of Data Collection and Data Analysis, Statistical Methods, Computer Methods ,Character (mathematics) ,Psychologie ,Action (philosophy) ,Persönlichkeitspsychologie ,Persönlichkeitsmerkmal ,personality traits ,ddc:300 ,Personality Psychology ,measurement - Abstract
Peterson and Seligman's (2004) values-in-action (VIA) framework maps 24 character strengths onto six more abstract virtues through a theoretical classification. However, compared to other individual difference constructs, there is little consensus about the factor-analytic structure of the VIA trait space. Applying Horn’s parallel analysis, Goldberg’s Bass-ackwards approach, and cross-country congruency analysis, we scrutinize the factor-analytic solutions-hierarchy of the 24 VIA strengths with the aim to identify one or more useful global levels of abstraction (akin to the Big Five, HEXACO/Big Six, or personality metatraits). We assessed the 24 character strengths with the psychometrically refined IPIP-VIA-R inventory in two large and heterogeneous samples from Germany and UK (total N ≈ 2,000). Results suggested that three global dimensions suffice to capture the essence of character strengths: Level III recovered more than 50% of the total variation of the 24 character strengths in well-interpretable, global/general, cross-culturally replicable dimensions. We provisionally labeled them positivity, dependability, and mastery. Their superordinate Level-II-dimensions were reminiscent of the “Big Two” personality metatraits Dynamism and Social Self-Regulation. Our results advance the understanding of the VIA character trait space and may serve as a basis for developing scales to assess these global dimensions.
- Published
- 2021