Humanistic Approach Flashcards
Free will
All approaches are somewhat determinist and at least partly shaped by forces over which we have no control. Humanistic is different - people are self determining & have free will
Free will - The notion that humans can make choices and their behaviour isn’t determined by internal biological or external forces
People still affected by external influences but are also active agents who determined their own development
Maslow’s Hierarchy
Psychological→Safety & Security→Love & belongingness→Self-esteem→Self-actualisation
Primary goal is self actualisation, but first the things before must be met
Self-actualisation
An innate tendency/desire to reach your potential
Lower levels must be met (deficiency needs) before self-actualisation (growth need)
Humanist psychologists regard personal growth as essential to being a human
The Self, congruence and conditions of worth
Self - the ideas and values that characterise ‘I’ and ‘me’ and includes perception and valuing of ‘what am’ and ‘what I can do’
Congruence - aim of Rogerian therapy, when the self-concept and ideal self match
Conditions of worth - when parent places limits or boundaries on their love of their children
Personal growth requires congruence between self and ideal self
If gap exists between 2 selves then person will experience state on congruence and self actualisation won’t be possible due to negative feelings of self worth
Counselling
In order to reduce gap Rogers developed client centred therapy - counselling
Help people cope with problems of living every day life
Rogers claimed many of issues we experience (EG - low self esteem) have roots from childhood and often explained by lack of unconditional positive regard
Rogers - counsellor is genuine, empathic, unconditional positive regard
Strengths
- Positive Approach
Optimistic approach that sees people as basically good and in control
Promotes positive image of the human condition
Freud saw humans as slaves to their past and claimed we were all unhappy
Suggests humanistic psychology offers refreshing & optimistic alternative to other approaches - Not reductionist
Approach rejects attempts to break up behaviour & experience into smaller components (reductionism)
Behaviourists - explain human & animal learning in terms of stimulus response connections
Cognitive - sees humans as little more than information processing machines
Biological - reduce behaviour to its basic physiological processes
Freud - described personality as a conflict through Id Ego & Superego
Humanist psychology advocate holism - emphasis placed on the whole person
Holism - Idea that subjective experience only understood by considering whole person
Therefore this approach may have more validity that its alternatives by considering meaningful human behaviour within real world context