Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Humanistic Approach
- Basic Assumptions
- reaction to the dominance of
behaviourism and psychodynamic
approaches
Anmerkungen:
- though behaviourists ignored subjective experience and psychodynamics marginalised our conscious awareness
- Individuals are free to
choose their behaviour
Anmerkungen:
- supports free will
in all situations we have autonomy - we can choose our behaviour in small ways and major ways
- free will leads to personal growth
- focus on individual's subjective
experience and conscious
awareness
Anmerkungen:
- reflexive awareness
- subjective experience is meaningful to us
understanding the meanings is to understand the individual (completely different view to behaviourists where we are products of stimulus response)
- Personal growth is a
key concept
Anmerkungen:
- we are able to become the best we can due to free will
- individuals are potentially good and can become better people
- reject scientific
psychology as it is
dehumanising
Anmerkungen:
- lacks ecological validity and regards the individual as passive to external and internal forcess
- Researchers
- Rogers
- the fundamental
predominance of the
subjective
Anmerkungen:
- each individual lives in their own subjective world ; they are the centre of their world of experiences
- the importance of
personal growth
Anmerkungen:
- individuals are motivated towards personal growth (developing their potential) and problems arise when this process is inhibited by society or by the demands of others
- the self is composed of
subjective experience and
the evaluation f others
Anmerkungen:
- problems can occur if the evaluation of others is conditional
- a child comes to believe that they are loved/evaluated positively when doing certain things e.g. getting good grades
- the love is seen as conditional on good grades and working for good grades may come into conflict with subjective experience producing incongruence
- Maslow
- conscious awareness - peak
experiences
Anmerkungen:
- occasional experiences characterised by a sense of delight wholeness meaningfulness and abundant energy
- they occur in many situations (from looking at the sunset to being in a sporting competition)
- these experiences are
unique to each
individual and so are
difficult to study
especially as the
experiences cannot be
described in words
- hierarchy of
needs
Anmerkungen:
- interested in motivation
- highest need is self-actualisation (rarely achieved) which is the need to become everything that one is capable of becoming (reach our full potential)
- studied famous self-actualisers (e.g. Einstein)
characteristics in common = doing something that they loved, being creative, being spontaneous, accepting of others and themselves, intimate relationships but happy being alone, slightly unconventional, and peak experiences
- may also be a negative side to a self-actualiser (stubborn, vain and anxious)
- self
actualisation
- Methods
- Qualitative
- case studies
- informal interviews
- open ended
questionnaires
- Q-sort
- Application to topics
- mood disorders
- depression results from lack of
unconditional postive regard and
inability to accept self
- used as supportive
therapy for Schizophrenia
- applied to relatively few areas of
psychology compared to the other
approaches. Therefore, its
contributions are limited to areas
such as therapy, abnormality,
motivation and personality
Anmerkungen:
- deliberately adopts a non-scientific approach to studying humans. For example their belief in free-will is in direct opposition to the deterministic laws of science. Also, the areas investigated by humanism, such as consciousness and emotion are very difficult to scientifically study. The outcome of such scientific limitations mean that their is a lack of empirical evidence to support the key theories of the approach.
- humanism can gain a better insight into an
individuals behavior through the use of
qualitative methods, such as unstructured
interviews. The approach also helped
proved a more holistic view of human
behavior, in contract to the reductionist
position of science.
- Impact
- CCT
- therapy to overcome incongruence;
therapist just listens and gives the client
unconditional positive regard
- Debates
- free will
- people direct their lives
towards self-chosen goals
- interactionist
- motivation of self
actualisation is innate;
humans are influenced by
environmental variables
- Holistic
- Thoughts, behaviour
and experience
should not be
reduced to smaller
component elements
- idiographic
- emphasises the
uniqueness of the
individual