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Identity processing style, self-construction, and personal epistemic assumptions: A social-cognitive perspective

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PSYCHOLOGY PRESS
DOI: 10.1080/17405620444000120

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A social-cognitive model of identity is presented. Identity is conceptualized as a self-theory, a conceptual structure composed of self-representational and self-regulatory constructs. It is postulated that individuals have different identity processing styles and function as different types of self-theorists: information-oriented problem solvers and decision makers; normative types who conform to the prescriptions of significant others; and diffuse-avoidant theorists who procrastinate and attempt to avoid dealing with identity-relevant conflicts. The role that personal epistemic assumptions play in self-theorizing and the possibility that epistemic assumptions contribute to individual differences in identity style are considered. But what then am I? A thing which thinks. What is a thing that thinks? It is a thing which doubts, understands, affirms, [and] denies. Descartes (1642/1956)

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