Carl Rogers developed person-centered counseling and psychotherapy in the 1940s-1990s as an alternative to behaviorism and psychoanalysis, which dominated psychology at the time. He believed human nature is essentially positive and focused on helping clients reach their full potential through unconditional positive regard. His theory proposed all people have an actualizing tendency to grow in a healthful direction when basic psychological needs are met. This challenged views of human nature as inherently selfish. Rogers made major contributions to psychotherapy research and practice.
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The Humanistic Perspective
Carl Rogers developed person-centered counseling and psychotherapy in the 1940s-1990s as an alternative to behaviorism and psychoanalysis, which dominated psychology at the time. He believed human nature is essentially positive and focused on helping clients reach their full potential through unconditional positive regard. His theory proposed all people have an actualizing tendency to grow in a healthful direction when basic psychological needs are met. This challenged views of human nature as inherently selfish. Rogers made major contributions to psychotherapy research and practice.
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The Humanistic
Perspective - The third force Carl Rogers
(1902–1987) • Carl Rogers developed person-centered counseling and psychotherapy in the United States roughly between 1940 and 1990
• His approach was born in an era when science
pervaded Western thinking, when psychoanalysis dominated clinical psychology
• Concurrently with the emergence of
behaviorism • He had to fight the behaviorism of academic psychology as well as the psychoanalysis that ruled the clinical world
• However, one of his biggest battles was with
psychiatry, a battle that he described as “an all-out war” (Rogers, 1980, p. 55). • One of the most influential figures in revolutionizing the direction of counseling theory and practice
• 2006 survey conducted by Psychotherapy
Networker (“The Top 10,” 2007) identified Carl Rogers as the single most influential psychotherapist of the past quarter century
• Founder of psychotherapy research - strong
interest in research—he was the first person to tape-record actual therapy sessions • Carl R. Rogers was born on January 8, 1902, in Oak Park, Illinois
• Four of six siblings
• Brought up in a conservative Protestant family
Idea of human nature Freud made Id the locus of most powerful motivation in the personality, inherently selfish, antisocial and primitive. Rogers believed that one of the most basic principles of Human nature is that human motivations and tendencies are positive We are essentially forward looking, sensitively humane and good. Negative emotions in us are a result of frustration of our needs/desires and are not at the core of human nature. Basic constructs and postulates • All human being have and are motivated by a positive force, an innate growth potential termed by Rogers as actualizing tendency.
• He defines it as “The inherent tendency of the
human beings to develop all its capacities in ways which serve to maintain or enhance the human being” Basic constructs and postulates • This includes both drive reducing and drive increasing behaviors.
• Drive reducing: hunger, thirst, sex, oxygen
deprivation.
• Drive increasing: tension increasing behaviors-
curiosity, creativity, and the willingness to undergo painful learning experiences in order to become more effective and independent Basic constructs and postulates • Actualizing tendency- only motive needed to account for all our behavior, whether to fill an empty stomach, to produce children, or to become independent and healthy. Self-Actualization • Self-actualization was a term first popularized by Kurt Goldstein
• the psychological process aimed at
maximizing the use of a person’s abilities and resources. This process may vary from one person to another • In other words, for our purposes, self- actualization can be thought of as the full realization of one’s creative, intellectual, or social potential. The self and self concept • The idea of a ‘self’ is central to Rogers’ theory of personality • This self is the real inner life of the person - It is present from birth • Unlike the real inner self, the self-concept develops through interactions with others: ‘you are a brave boy’, ‘aren’t you an observant child’, ‘why are you always so naughty?’. Defenses • Experiences that serve as a threatening reminder of the incongruence (between the self concept and the experiential reality) between the self-concept and organismic experience are likely to be defended against by distorting them, or (less frequently) by blocking them from consciousness. • Even such positive feelings as love or success may be defended against if they fail to agree with the self- concept. Critique • Rogers has been criticized for an overly optimistic and simplified view of human nature. Actualizing all of our innermost potentials is desirable only if the deepest levels of personality are healthy and constructive • Yet it seems doubtful that an inherently peaceful and cooperative species would so frequently engage in war, crime, and other destructive behaviors solely because of parental pathogenic behaviors and introjected conditions of worth. • Fails to explain more precisely his proposed innate potential for actualization.