Why is "evidence to support the criminal personality" a strength of Eysenck's theory of the criminal personality?
Eysenck and Eysenck compared 2070 prisoners' scores on the Eysenck Personality Questionnaire with 2422 controls On measures of extraversion, neuroticism and psychoticism, across all age groups sampled, prisoners recorded higher average scores than controls
This is a strength as it agrees with the predictions of the theory that offenders rate higher on these personality traits than the general population
Why is "offending behaviour cannot be explained by personality traits alone" a limitation of Eysenck's theory of the criminal personality?
Moffit drew a distinction between offending behaviour that only occurs in adolescence and that which continues into adulthood
She argued that personality traits alone were a poor predictor of how long offending behaviour would go on for, the sense of whether someone is likely to become a career offender
She considered persistence in offending behaviour to be the result of a reciprocal process between individual personality traits on the one hand and environmental reactions to those traits on the other
This presents a more complex picture than Eysenck suggested that the course of offending behaviour is determined by an interaction between personality and the environment