0% found this document useful (0 votes)
53 views10 pages

T.O.P. Humanistic Existential Theories

1) Abraham Maslow proposed a holistic-dynamic theory of personality that centered on a hierarchy of needs and the concept of self-actualization. He believed people are motivated to fulfill lower level needs like physiological and safety needs before pursuing higher level needs. 2) Carl Rogers developed the person-centered theory which posited that all humans have an actualizing tendency to develop their full potential given the right conditions. He believed the conditions of unconditional positive regard, empathy, and congruence from others allow people to grow in a constructive way. 3) Both theories view people as inherently motivated to grow and develop when their basic needs are met, with Maslow focusing on fulfilling a hierarchy of needs and Rogers emphasizing
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
53 views10 pages

T.O.P. Humanistic Existential Theories

1) Abraham Maslow proposed a holistic-dynamic theory of personality that centered on a hierarchy of needs and the concept of self-actualization. He believed people are motivated to fulfill lower level needs like physiological and safety needs before pursuing higher level needs. 2) Carl Rogers developed the person-centered theory which posited that all humans have an actualizing tendency to develop their full potential given the right conditions. He believed the conditions of unconditional positive regard, empathy, and congruence from others allow people to grow in a constructive way. 3) Both theories view people as inherently motivated to grow and develop when their basic needs are met, with Maslow focusing on fulfilling a hierarchy of needs and Rogers emphasizing
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 10

THEORIES OF PERSONALITY

PSYCHODYNAMIC THEORIES – SACMEEKHA


Proponent Theory Key Terms/Ideas

Sigmund Freud Psychoanalytic Theory Sex and Aggression;


Uncosncious; Id, Ego,
Superego; Oedipus Complex

Alfred Adler Individual Psychology Organ Inferiority; Striving


Forces; Creative Power;
Organ Dialect

Carl Jung Analytical Psychology Levels of Psyche;


Archetypes; Introversion and
Extraversion

Melanie Klein Object Relation Psychology Good and Bad Breast

Erik Erikson Post-Freudian Psychology Self-identity; Psychosocial


stage; Basic strength &
Psychological crisis

Erich Fromm Humanistic Psychoanalysis Existential dichotomies;


Transcendence; Frame of
orientation; Burden of
freedom

Karen Horneye Psychoanalytic Social Theory Neurotic Needs; Neurotic


Trends; Basic Anxiety; Basic
Hostility

Harry Sullivan Interpersonal Theory Humans have no personality;


Levels of cognition;
Dynamisms; Personifications

HUMANISTIC EXISTENTIAL THEORIES – CAR


Proponent Theory Key Terms/Ideas

Carl Rogers Person-Centered Theory Unconditional Positive


Regard; Conditions of worth;
Empathic Listening

Abraham Maslow Holistic Dynamic Theory Hierarchy of needs; B-values

Rollo May Existential Psychology Existence; Being-in-the


world; Nonbeing; Care, Love,
Will; Freedom & Destiny

BIOLOGICAL-TRAIT-DISPOSITIONAL THEORIES – GRPRH


Proponent Theory Key Terms/Ideas

Gordon Allport Psychology of the Individual

Robert Mccrae & Paul Costa Five-factor Trait Theory

Raymond Catell 16 Personality Continuum

Hans Eysenck Biologically Based Factor


Theory

OTHER THEORIES – HD
Proponent Theory Key Terms/Ideas

Henry Murray Personology

David Buss Evolutionary Theory of


Personality

LEARNING/COGNITIVE THEORIES – BARMiKe


Proponent Theory Key Terms/Ideas

B.F. Skinner Behavioral Analysis

Albert Bandura Social Cognitive Theories

Julian Rotter & Walter Cognitive Social Learning


Mischel Theories

George Kelly Psychology of Personal


Conduct
THEORIES OF PERSONALITY | HOLISTIC-DYNAMIC THEORY

● Proponent: Abraham Harold Maslow (Abe)


● Assumption:
○ Whole person is constantly being motivated by one need or another and that
people have the potential to grow toward psychological health – self-actualization
○ To attain self-actualization, people must satisfy lower level needs
● Concepts:
○ 5 views of motivation
■ Holistic approach of motivation (whole person is motivated)
■ Motivation is usually complex
■ People are continually motivated by one need or another
■ All people everywhere are motivated by the same basic needs
■ Needs can be arranged on a hierarchy
○ Hierarchy of needs
■ This concept assumes that lower level needs must be satisfied at at least
relatively satisfied before higher needs become motivators
■ 5 needs = conative needs
■ Physiological – only needs that can be completely or overly satisfied;
recurring
■ Safety – can not be overly satisfied
■ Love & Belongingness
■ Esteem – reputation & self-esteem
■ Self-actualization – realization of all one’s potential
○ Other categories of needs
■ Aesthetic needs – beauty & aesthetically pleasing experiences; not
universal
■ Cognitive needs – when this need is blocked, all needs are threatened
■ Neurotic needs – leads to stagnation & pathology; non-productive
○ Self-actualization
■ Criterias
● They were free from pathology
● Had progressed through the hierarchy of needs
● Embracing the B-values
● Fulfilled their needs to grow, to develop, and to increasingly
become what they were capable of becoming
○ B-values
■ Meta needs (ultimate level of needs)
■ Effortless
■ Humor
■ Autonomy
■ Truth
■ Goodness
■ Beauty
■ Wholeness
■ Aliveness
■ Uniqueness
■ Perfection
■ Completion
■ Justice
■ Simplicity
■ Totality
○ Characteristics of self-actualizing people
■ More efficient perception of reality
■ Acceptance of self, others, and nature
■ Spontaneity , Simplicity, & Naturalness
■ Problem-centering
■ Need for privacy
■ Autonomy
■ Continued freshness of appreciation
■ Peak experience
■ Gemeinschaftsgefühl
■ Profound interpersonal relations
■ Democratic character structure
■ Discrimination between means and ends
■ Philosophical sense of humor
■ Creativeness
■ Resistance to enculturation
○ Jonah complex
■ Fear of being one’s best; attempts to run away from one’s destiny
○ Psychotherapy
■ Aim of therapy would be for clients to embrace B-values

THEORIES OF PERSONALITY | PERSON-CENTERED THEORY

● Proponent: Carl Rogers


● Assumption:
○ Formative Tendency
■ Tendency for all matter, both inorganic & organic, to evolve from simpler
to more complex forms
○ Actualizing Tendency
■ Interrelated and more pertinent assumption
■ Tendency within all humans to move toward complexion or fulfillment of
potentials
■ Only motive people possess
○ Need for maintenance
■ Tendency to resist change and to seek status quo
○ Enhancement
■ Willing to learn and to change
○ Other animals and even plants have an inherent tendency to grow toward reaching
their genetic potential – provided certain conditions are presented
○ Having a partner who possesses congruence, empathy, and unconditional positive
regard does not cause people to move toward constructive personal change; it
does permit them to actualize their innate tendency toward self-fulfillment
● Concepts:
○ The self & self-actualization
■ Infants begin to develop a vague concept of self when a portion of their
experience becomes personalized & differentiated in awareness as “I” or
“me” experiences
■ Self actualization
● Subset of the actualization tendency & is therefore are not
synonymous with it
● Actualization tendency refers to the organismic experiences of the
individual
● Organism + Perceived self (in harmony) = 2 actualization
tendencies are nearly identical
● Organism + Perceived self (not in harmony) = discrepancy
● 2 self subsystems; self-concept & ideal self
○ Awareness
■ Self-concept and ideal self will not exist without this
■ Symbolic representation of some portion of our experiences
○ Denial of positive experiences
■ It is not only the negative or derogatory experiences that are distorted or
denied to awareness
■ Many people have difficulty accepting genuine compliments and positive
feedback, even when deserved
○ Becoming a person
■ An individual must make contact – positive or negative – with another
person
■ Positive regard – the person develops a need to be loved, liked, or
accepted by another person
■ Positive self-regard – experience of prizing or valuing one’s self
○ Barriers of Psychological Health
■ Conditions of worth –
● valued/accepted just when meeting people’s expectations and
approval
■ Incongruence
● failure to recognize organismic experiences as self-experiences; do
not accurately symbolize organismic experiences into awareness
because they appear to be inconsistent with emerging self-concept
● Vulnerability – greater incongruence = more vulnerable; behave in
ways that are incomprehensible not only to others but also to
themselves
● Anxiety & Threat
○ Anxiety – state of uneasiness or tension whose cause is
unknown
○ Threat – awareness that our self is no longer whole or
congruent
■ Defensiveness
● Protection of the self-concept against anxiety and threat by denial
or distortion of experiences inconsistent with it
● Distortion – misinterpret an experience in order to fit it into some
aspect of our self-concept
● Denial – refuse to perceive an experience in awareness
■ Disorganization
● Failed defenses and behavior that becomes disorganized and
psychotic
● People sometimes behave consistently with their organismic
experience & sometimes in accordance with their shattered
self-concept
○ Psychotherapy
■ Client-centered therapy
■ Rogerian therapy can be viewed in terms of conditions, process, and
outcomes
■ Counselor/therapist must be congruent, provides an atmosphere or
unconditional acceptance and accurate empathy
● Unconditional positive regard
○ Need to be liked, prized, or accepted by another person
exists without any condition or qualification
○ Warm, positive, and accepting attitude
● Empathic listening
○ Therapist accurately sense the feelings of their clients and
are able to communicate these perceptions so that clients
know that another person has entered their world
○ Empathy is not equal to sympathy
○ The person of tomorrow
■ Fully functioning person
■ More adaptable
■ Open to their experiences
■ Tendency to live fully in the moment
■ Would remain confident of their own ability to experience harmonious
relation with others
■ More integrated, more whole, with no artificial boundary between
conscious and unconscious processes
■ Basic trust of human nature
■ Would enjoy a greater richness in life that do other people

THEORIES OF PERSONALITY | EXISTENTIAL PSYCHOLOGY

● Proponent: Rollo Reese May


● Assumption:
○ Modern people frequently run away both from making choices and from
assuming responsibility
● Concepts:
○ Existentialism
■ Existence takes precedence over essence
■ Existence
● To emerge or to become
● Suggests process
● Growth and change
● People’s essence is their power to continually redefine themselves
through the choices they make
■ Essence
● Implies a static immutable substance
● Refers to a product
● Stagnation & finality
● Sought to understand the essential composition of things &
humans
■ Opposes the split between subject and object
■ People search for some meaning to their lives
■ Hold that ultimately each of s is responsible for who we are and what we
become
■ Basically anti-theoretical
○ Being-in-the-world
■ “Dasein” (to exist there)
■ No sense of dasein= no unity of self & world
■ Feeling of isolation & alienation of the self from the world is suffered not
only by pathologically disturbed individuals but also by most individuals
in modern society
■ Alienation is the illness of our time – separation from nature, lack of
meaningful interpersonal relations, alienation from one;s authentic self
■ Umwelt
● Environment around us
■ Mitwelt
● Relations with other people
■ Eigenwelt
● Relationship with oneself
○ Non-being
■ Dread of not being; nothingness
■ Death
○ Anxiety
■ Neurotic anxiety – behaving in a non-productive and self-defeating
manner
■ Much of human behavior is motivated by an underlying sense of dread and
anxiety
■ A threat to some important value
■ Normal anxiety – does not involve repression and can be confronted
constructively on the conscious level
○ Guilt
■ Arises when people deny their potentialities, fail to accurately perceive the
needs of fellow humans, or remain oblivious to their dependence on the
natural world
■ Nature of being and not to feelings arising from specific situations or
transgressions
■ Separation guilt
● Umwelt
● Separation from nature
■ Mitwelt
● Inability to perceive accurately the world of others
■ Eigenwelt
● Denial of our own potentialities or with our failure to fulfill them
■ Positive ontological guilt = develop a healthy sense of humility
■ Refuse to accept ontological guilt = neurotic/morbid
○ Intentionality
■ Structure that gives meaning to experience and allows people to make
decisions about the future
■ Action implies intentionality & vice versa
○ Care, Love, Will
■ Care – active process that suggest that things matter; source of love
■ Love – to care, to delight in the presence of another partner and to affirm
that person’s value as much as one’s own
■ Will – conscious commitment to action; care is the source of will
○ Union of love & will
■ May believed that our modern society has lost sight of the true nature of
love and will, equating love with sex and will with will power
■ Psychologically healthy people are able to combine love and will because
both imply care, choice, action, and responsibility
○ Forms of love
■ Sex – manipulating organs; desire to experience pleasure
■ Eros – making love; union with loved one; built on tenderness and care
■ Philia – intimate nonsexual friendship between two people
■ Agape – needed by Philia; esteem for the other
■ Healthy adult relationship blend all 4 forms of love
○ Freedom and destiny
■ Healthy individuals are able to both to assume their freedom and to face
their destiny
■ Freedom – capacity to know that we are the determined one
● Existential freedom – freedom of action/doing
● Essential freedom – freedom of being/inner freedom
■ Destiny – design of the universe speaking through the design of each one
of us
● Ultimate destiny = death
○ Power of myth
■ Myths are not falsehood; rather, they are conscious and unconscious belief
systems that provide explanation for personal and social problems
■ Myths are stories that unify a society
○ Psychopathology
■ Principal ingredients – alienation,, apathy, emptiness
■ Lack of connectedness and an ability to fulfill one;s destiny
○ Psychotherapy
■ The goal of may’s psychotherapy was not to cure patients of any specific
disorder, but to make them more fully human; to set people free, allow
them to make choices, and to assume responsibility for those choices

You might also like

pFad - Phonifier reborn

Pfad - The Proxy pFad of © 2024 Garber Painting. All rights reserved.

Note: This service is not intended for secure transactions such as banking, social media, email, or purchasing. Use at your own risk. We assume no liability whatsoever for broken pages.


Alternative Proxies:

Alternative Proxy

pFad Proxy

pFad v3 Proxy

pFad v4 Proxy