humanistic

Cards (17)

  • What were the intentions of the humanistic approach?

    • offer less deterministic + artificial approach
    • concerned with human experience, uniqueness, meaning, freedom and choice
  • What are the basic assumptions of the humanistic approach?
    • Humans have free will - behaviour is not all determined
    • Humans have an innate ambition to achieve maximum potential
    • Understanding human behaviour must be based on studying human behaviour, not animals
    • Idiographic approach - study individuals not the average of groups
  • What is the definition of idiographic?

    study of individual experience/differences
  • What is the definition of nomothetic?

    study of general scientific laws
  • Why do humanistic psychologists reject scientific approaches?

    • Favours subjective research methods
    (avoid objective research such as falsification+non-participant experiment)
    • Criticises use of quantitative data as it reduces the meaning of individuality
    • Aims to focus on the whole human rather than a part (e.g, genes/neurotransmitters)
    • Favours idiographic method
  • Who developed the hierarchy of needs?
    Maslow
  • What are the categories of the hierarchy of needs?

    • Self-actualisation
    • Esteem
    • Love/Belonging
    • Safety
    • Physiological
  • What does the self-actualization category include?

    • Morality
    • Creativity
    • Spontaneity
    • Problem-solving
    • Lack of prejudice
  • What does the esteem category include?

    • self-esteem
    • confidence
    • achievement
    • respect for/by others
  • What does the love/belonging category include?

    • friendship
    • family
    • sexual intimacy
  • What does the safety category include?

    • security of body/fiances/resources/property/health/family
  • What does the physiological category include?

    • food
    • sleep
    • sex
    • breathing
    • homeostasis
  • What is the definition of personal growth?

    developing and changing as a person to become fulfilled, satisfied and goal orientated
  • What is Roger's theory?

    • For a person to grow they need an environment that provides them with genuineness, acceptance, and empathy
    • All humans have the motivation of the potential to self-actualise
    • Human's basic need is to feel loved/nurtured by significant people in their lives without conditions
    • Defense mechanisms lead to incongruence
  • What is the definition of incongruence?

    the larger gap between one's ideal self and their actual self
  • What is the definition of congruence?

    when one's actual self is similar to their ideal self
  • How useful is Roger's theory?

    Client-centered theory (CCT):
    • relates the absence of unconditional positive regard due to boundaries/lack of love in childhood to the development of psychological problems
    • reduces incongruence
    • if they did not receive unconditional positive regard in childhood it will be provided by the therapist to facilitate psychological healing+personal growth