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Dispositional

Dispositional is an adjective relating to disposition or to an inherent tendency of a person, system, or object to behave in a certain way. In everyday language it often describes temperament or character, while in technical contexts it denotes internal properties or propensities that are argued to explain outcomes. The opposite concept in many domains is situational, referring to external circumstances rather than internal predispositions.

In psychology, dispositional explanations attribute behavior to enduring traits such as personality, motives, or beliefs, rather

In philosophy and metaphysics, dispositional properties or powers are tendencies that tend to manifest under appropriate

In medicine or genetics, the word is used to describe predispositions or propensities, such as a dispositional

See also

- Disposition

- Dispositional attribution

- Attribution theory

- Fundamental attribution error

- Dispositional property

- Personality psychology

- Situational factors

than
to
situational
factors.
The
term
is
central
to
attribution
theory,
which
contrasts
dispositional
(internal)
and
situational
(external)
causation.
Discussions
of
the
fundamental
attribution
error
examine
how
observers
overemphasize
dispositional
causes
when
judging
others.
conditions.
Examples
include
fragility,
solubility,
and
electrical
conductivity:
a
fragile
object
tends
to
break
when
struck,
sugar
tends
to
dissolve
in
water,
and
a
magnet
tends
to
attract
iron.
These
properties
are
often
analyzed
via
counterfactuals—statements
about
what
would
happen
under
different
conditions.
risk
for
certain
diseases,
which
arise
from
an
interaction
of
heredity
and
environment.