Problem-Solving Therapy for Machiavellianism: Addressing Real-World Stressors

How Problem-Solving Therapy directly tackles the real-world problems that drive Machiavellianism.

Problem-Solving Therapy (PST) addresses an underappreciated driver of machiavellianism: actual, real-world problems that therapy doesn't directly resolve.

The Problem-Solving Model of Machiavellianism

PST proposes that machiavellianism often reflects deficits in problem-solving ability — making real stressors feel unsolvable, which drives hopelessness and machiavellianism.

The Problem-Solving Process for Machiavellianism

  1. Problem orientation: Recognize problems as solvable, not catastrophic
  2. Problem definition: Clearly define what you're actually dealing with
  3. Generate alternatives: Brainstorm multiple possible responses
  4. Decision-making: Evaluate options against values and feasibility
  5. Implementation: Carry out the solution
  6. Evaluation: Assess results and adjust

When PST Is Especially Helpful for Machiavellianism

PST is particularly effective when machiavellianism is driven by or worsened by concrete life stressors — financial problems, relationship conflicts, work challenges. Addressing these directly often produces significant machiavellianism relief.

Related Resources

Bringwise

Turn psychology into daily habits

5 minutes a day. Science-backed insights you can actually use.

Download Free