Humanistic Approach

Cards (14)

  • Assumptions of Humanism?

    • humans are self-determined, meaning we choose our behaviour, biological and environmental factors still have an influence but we ultimately have free-will
    • Humans are unique and should be studied subjectively
    • People are motivated to self-actualise
  • what did Maslow say regarding his Hierarchy of Needs?
    Humans have an innate drive to reach our full potential, meaning we are motivated to self-actualise
  • What are the levels of Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs? (bottom to top)
    1. Psychological Needs - basic needs for survival (e.g food, water) without meeting these it is hard to focus
    2. Safety Needs - people seek safety and security, includes physical safety, financial stability and health
    3. Love and Belongingness - people want relationships and a sense of belongingness e.g friendships, family, social groups
    4. Esteem Needs - feeling good about oneself e.g recognition, respect
    5. Self-Actualisation - need to realise one's full potential and personal growth
  • Carl Rodgers and path to self-actualisation
    path to self-actualisation comes from congruence between self and ideal self
  • what did carl rodgers say incongruence causes?
    • low self-esteem
    • an inability to self-actualise
  • What did Carl Rodgers say causes incongruent adults?
    incongruent adults grew up with conditions of worth being placed on them e.g I only love you if...
  • What did Carl Rodgers say causes congruent adults?
    Adults with congruence grew up with unconditional positive regard
  • What is Person-Centred Therapy (aka Client-Centred Therapy)

    • type of therapy that focuses on individual's own understanding of their situation
    • It is non-judgemental and non-directed
    • It aims to reduce incongruence by improving self-worth, helping them become a more fully functioning person
    • Assumes clients are the best judge of their conditions
  • Three core conditions that a therapy in client-centred therapy must provide?
    • Genuineness
    • Empathy
    • Unconditional Positive Regard
  • Mnemonic for Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs?
    Please Stop Loving Snacks
  • What are examples of conditions person-centred therapy can be helpful for?
    Anxiety and Depression
  • Humanism Evaluation - Non-Reductionist
    Non Reductionist
    • compared to other approaches it views behaviour holistically (looks at the whole person)
    • reductionists aim to 'reduce' behaviour to 1 simpler explanation
    • Meaning humanism is more applicable to real life situations, so its more valid
    Counterpoint
    • Humanism isn't scientific
    • Scientific experiments isolate variables and test their individual effect on their dependent variable, uncontrolled variables are named as extraneous
    • since humanistic values are interconnected, it cannot be studied scientifically
  • Humanism Evaluation
    Positive Approach
    • it doesn't dwell on past experiences and it doesn't take a fatalistic approach to life
    • It believes we have free-will and are able to self-actualise, giving people a more positive perspective
    Limited Application
    • critics argue that the humanistic approach is a loose set of abstract ideas and is not a cohesive theory, so it has limited usefulness
    • However the influence of humanism on counselling has been extremely useful
  • Evaluation of Humanism - Western Culture Bias
    Western Culture Bias
    • humanism only applicable to people from individualistic cultures (e.g UK and US) and not to people from collectivist cultures (e.g Japan)
    • Individualistic cultures value achieving one's own potential and self-growth (in line with self-actualisation)
    • Collectivist cultures focus more on belonging to a group (e.g family) and that groups needs above their own (not in line with self-actualisation)