“…Although Windelband (1904) did not restrict the idiographic approach to the study of individual persons, the call for a careful analysis of the individual person as an alternative to the analysis of aggregates was echoed throughout the history of personality psychology (Allport, 1937; Beck, 1953; Beck & Jackson, 2020a; Carlson, 1971; Lamiell, 1981; Magnusson, 2001; Shoda, Mischel, & Wright, 1994; Stern, 1911), and there are indeed idiographic studies in personality science that are but low in number compared with the vast amount of nomothetic research (e.g. Allport, 1965; Beck & Jackson, 2020a; Cervone, Mercurio, & Lilley, 2020; Grice, 2004; Hermans, 1988; Karch, Sander, von Oertzen, Brandmaier, & Werkle‐Bergner, 2015; Nasby & Read, 1997; Pelham, 1993; Schmitz & Skinner, 1993; Shoda et al, 1994; Simonton, 1998).…”