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Chapter 11 The Humanistic Approach: Theory and Application

Chapter 11 The Humanistic Approach: Theory and Application. The roots of humanistic psychology. Humanistic psychology has been called the “third force” in American psychology, with psychoanalysis and behaviorism representing the first two “forces.”

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Chapter 11 The Humanistic Approach: Theory and Application

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  1. Chapter 11The Humanistic Approach:Theory and Application

  2. The roots of humanistic psychology • Humanistic psychology has been called the “third force” in American psychology, with psychoanalysis and behaviorism representing the first two “forces.” • Humanistic psychology has its roots in existential philosophy, which was proposed and explored by a number of European philosophers in the early decades of the 20th century.

  3. Existentialist philosophers: Nietzsche, Kierkegaard, Husserl, and Sartre

  4. Key elements of existentialist philosophy • We have no choice regarding the life circumstances into which we are born. • After achieving self-awareness and an understanding of the world, we can‒and must‒begin to make meaningful choices. • Existential anxiety is a major fact of human existence. • The only meaning that life has is the meaning that we confer on it through the choices we make. We are all “lonely heroes” who must choose without fully knowing the consequences of these choices. • We may attempt to avoid making choices and accepting responsibility for them, but if we do we are displaying “bad faith.” • People attempt to escape choice and responsibility in different ways: by turning our lives over to other people, by trying to live in the past or in the future, by letting our habit patterns take over, or by using addictions as a buffer against existential anxiety.

  5. The roots of humanistic psychology • Humanistic psychology also owes a great deal to the work of three American psychologists: Carl Rogers, Abraham Maslow, and Fritz Perls. Other prominent existential psychologists include Viktor Frankl, R.D. Laing, and Rollo May.

  6. Humanistic psychologists: Carl Rogers, Abraham Maslow, and Fritz Perls

  7. Key elements of the humanistic approach • Personal responsibility • The here and now • The phenomenology of the individual • Personal growth

  8. Carl Rogers (1902-1987) • Grew up in a repressed Midwestern farm family in which the open expression of emotion was discouraged • Planned a career in agriculture, but changed his mind and went to study for the ministry at Columbia University • Took graduate courses in psychology while at Columbia and received his Ph.D • Taught at Ohio State, the University of Chicago, and the University of Wisconsin • Received a Distinguished Scientific Contribution Award from APA in 1956 • Moved to LaJolla, California in 1963, where he founded the Center for Studies of the Person

  9. Key concepts introduced by Rogers • The fully functioning person, Rogers’ term for people who: • are open to their experiences • try to live each moment as it comes • trust their own feelings and intuitions • are less likely to conform to societal roles or other people’s expectations • follow their own interests and decide what’s best for themselves • experience their feelings deeply and intensely • Anxiety and defense through subception, distortion, and denial • Conditions of worth • conditional positive regard • unconditional positive regard

  10. Conditional positive regard

  11. Abraham Maslow (1908-1970) • Had a lonely childhood as a Jewish boy in a non-Jewish neighborhood • Tried law school at City College in New York, then transferred first to Cornell and then to Wisconsin, where he became an enthusiastic behaviorist • Worked with Harry Harlow at Wisconsin and then worked with E.L. Thorndike at Columbia University • Became disillusioned with behaviorism with the birth of his first daughter • Taught at Brooklyn College, where he met Horney, Fromm, Adler, Benedict, and Wertheimer, and decided to study the “self-actualized personality” • Taught at Brandeis from 1951 until shortly before his death in 1970

  12. Maslow’s hierarchy of human needs

  13. Four common misconceptions about Maslow’s need hierarchy • The order in which people seek to satisfy these needs is fixed and invariant. • The needs at a lower level on the need hierarchy must be satisfied 100% before the person will begin to seek to satisfy a higher-order need. • The way that people satisfy a particular need is the same in all cultures and in all historical periods. • Any given behavior is motivated by one and only one need. As common misconceptions, all of these beliefs are false.

  14. Maslow’s study of psychologically healthy people • Maslow used what he called “holistic analysis” to identify the following set of characteristics that were common to seemingly self-actualized people such as Thomas Jefferson, Albert Einstein, Eleanor Roosevelt, and Albert Schweitzer. According to Maslow, they are people who: • both reality-centeredand problem-centered • tend to accept themselves for who and what they are • are less restricted by cultural norms and conventions than the average person • display self-actualizing creativity in the way they live their lives • have relatively few friends, but their friendships tend to be deep and rewarding ones • have a philosophical and non-hostile sense of humor. • have a strong need for solitude and are comfortable being alone • express a strong appreciation for life’s experiences • are more likely to be aware of “peak experiences” and to experience them more intensely than the average person does

  15. A literal “peak experience”?

  16. Mihalyi Csikszentmihalyi’s concept of optimal experience • Using beeper (electronic pager) studies, Csikszentimihalyi and his colleagues found that people’s most rewarding and engaging experiences were typically work-related. • These optimal experiences could be characterized by a state called flow. • Csikszentimihalyi proposed a set of eight features that contribute to the sense of flow. • It isn’t necessary for all eight features to be present for a person to experience flow, but most, if not all, of them will typically be present.

  17. Eight features of flow that characterize optimal experiences • The activity is challenging and requires skill. • One’s attention is completely absorbed by the activity. • The activity has clear goals. • There is clear feedback. • One can concentrate only on the task at hand. • One achieves a sense of personal control. • One loses self-consciousness. • One loses a sense of time passing.

  18. Optimal experience and happiness in everyday activities • According to Czikszentmihalyi, personal happiness comes from taking responsibility for our own life and finding meaning and enjoyment in our ongoing experiences. • Although optimal experiences are reported during play and recreational activities, they are most often reported during work hours. • Work that challenges us and tests the limits of our ability and creativity is the most rewarding, because it can fulfill our needs on multiple levels. • In one study, high school students who took classes for intrinsic, rather than extrinsic reasons, found the learning process more satisfying and enjoyable, and reported that, subjectively, the time involved passed more quickly.

  19. Application: Job satisfaction and the hierarchy of human needs • Most of us will spend many, if not most, of our waking hours at work. • For us to be satisfied with how this time is spent, our jobs need to provide more than a steady paycheck; ideally, they should help us meet most, or even all, of the needs in Maslow’s need hierarchy. • Maslow therefore promoted what he called Eupsychian management―restructuring a work organization to help employees satisfy higher-order needs.

  20. Maslow’s hierarchy of human needs

  21. Application: Person-centered therapy • Carl Rogers argued that therapy should be non-directive and “person-centered” because therapists cannot understand clients as well as they understand themselves. • Therapists should create the optimal environment in which clients can heal themselves. Specifically, this environment requires: • Genuineness • Empathy • Unconditional positive regard • Opportunities for reflection • Resisting the temptation to tell clients what they really mean to say • Therapists can use the Q-sort technique to assess how the client’s self-perceptions change over the course of the therapy.

  22. Distribution of cards in Block’s Q-Sort

  23. Examples of Q-sort items • Is a talkative individual • Behaves in a sympathetic or considerate manner • Initiates humor • Prides self on being “objective,” rational • Seeks reassurance from others • Is productive, gets things done • Has high aspiration level for self • Able to see to the heart of important problems • Is cheerful • Values own independence and autonomy • Is calm, relaxed in manner

  24. Distribution of cards in Block’s Q-Sort

  25. Degrees of overlap (perceived discrepancies) between the real self and the ideal self

  26. Changing real and idea self Q-sorts for a 40-year-old female client (Rogers, 1954)

  27. Degrees of overlap between the real self and the ideal self

  28. Strengths and criticisms of the humanistic approach • Strengths • This approach was the first to emphasize the healthy side of human personality, and it set the stage for what is now called positive psychology (the psychology of happiness, forgiveness, etc.). • It has had a huge impact on the way psychologists and counselors approach therapy. • It has also had a strong and continuing influence in disciplines such as education, communication, and business. • Criticisms • Its insistence on free will seems to be incompatible with a deterministic view of science, in which all actions can be reduced to physical causes. • Many key concepts, such as “self-actualization,” “fully functioning” and “peak experience” are not well-defined. • Humanistic psychotherapy techniques may have limited applicability. • Humanistic psychologists may make overly naïve assumptions about human nature.

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