Humanistic

    Cards (13)

    • What is the main assumption of Humanistic psychology?
      people are active agents who are self determining and have free will
    • Maslow's hierarchy of needs:
      Maslow identified five basic human needs which are prioritised in a hierarchy and you can't achieve higher needs until lower ones are met
    • What are the five basic human needs?
      • Physiological - food, sex, sleep, water breathing
      • Safety - employment, shelter, health
      • Love/belonging - Friends, family, romance
      • Esteem - confidence, self-esteem
      • Self actualisation - achieving your full potential
    • The self and congruence (Rogers)
      • Our self develops as a result of interactions
      • We also have an ideal self
      • If these are similar a state of congruence exists
      • High congruence = High self esteem
    • Conditions of Worth
      Messages we take on board about what we have to do to be valued
    • What is the drawback of conditions of worth?
      • conditions of worth arise from other peoples dreams and expectations
      • They do not always align with our natural talents, interests and abilities
      • As a result it is more likely they lead to a life of unhappiness and lack of fulfilment
    • Client Centred Therapy (Rogers):

      Helps overcome psychological barriers by helping people self actualise and reach high congruence by increasing a persons feeling of self worth
    • What are the key concepts of client centred therapy?
      • Honesty
      • Unconditional positive regard
      • Empathetic
    • Evaluation 1:
      • LIMITATION
      • Untestable concepts that are vague and abstract, the approach describes itself as anti-scientific so there is limited empirical evidence
    • Evaluation 2:
      • STRENGTH
      • Praised for promoting a positive image of the human condition, seeing people in control of their lives and having the freedom to change.
      • Completely disregards Freud. offers a refreshing and optimistic alternative
    • Evaluation 3:
      • STRENGTH and LIMITATION
      • Has real life application eg in schools or workplaces and counselling psychology has advanced many therapies
      • However this is very very limited to a few areas and has very limited impact within psychology due to lacking a sound evidence base, not a comprehensive theory instead a loose set of abstract concepts
    • Evaluation 4:
      • STRENGTH
      • Anti reductionist, take a holistic approach which has greater validity as it considers the whole and human behaviour in real life context
    • Evaluation 5:

      • LIMITATION
      • Culturally biased towards western culture. Many central ideas are heavily associated with western, individualist cultures.
      • Collectivist cultures (eg India) emphasise the needs of the group and interdependence so may not identify with humanist values