the humanistic approach AO3 Flashcards

1
Q

It is anti-reductionist

A
  • Humanistic psychologists reject any attempt to break up behaviour and experience into smaller components
  • They advocate holism - the idea that subjective experience can only be understood by considering the whole person (their
    relationships, past, present, and future etc)
  • This approach may have more validity than other approaches by considering meaningful human behaviour within a real-life context
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2
Q

It is a positive approach

A
  • It promotes a positive image of the human condition - seeing people as in control of their lives and having the freedom to change
  • Freud saw humans as slaves to their past and claimed that all of us existed somewhere between ‘common unhappiness and absolute despair’
  • Humanistic psychology offers a refreshing and optimistic alternative
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3
Q

Client-centred therapy is widely used in health, social work and industry and has helped many people overcome difficulties they face in life

A

Client-centred therapy is widely used in health, social work and industry and has helped many people overcome difficulties they face in life → this is a significant contribution to improving people’s quality of life

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4
Q

The approach has limited application to the real world

A
  • Humanistic psychology has had a limited impact within psychology as a whole
  • perhaps because it lacks a sound evidence base
  • As a result, the approach has been described not as a
    comprehensive theory but as a loose set of abstract concepts
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5
Q

The approach has untestable concepts

A
  • Rogers did not attempt to introduce more scientific rigour into his work by developing an objective measure of progress in therapy → The ideas of ‘self-actualisation’ and ‘congruence’ are difficult to test
  • Humanistic psychology is short of empirical evidence
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6
Q

It may have a Western cultural bias

A
  • Many of the ideas central to the humanistic approach, such as freedom and personal growth, would be more associated with individualistic cultures in the Western world such as the US
  • Collectivist cultures such as India, which emphasise the needs of the group and interdependence, may not identify so easily with the ideals and values of humanistic psychology
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7
Q

free will

A
  • free will is central to humanistic thinking.
  • Advocates of this approach believe that behaviour is a choice, rather than determined by outside forces, and an individual can directly control and influence their own destiny.
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8
Q

holism

A
  • the concept of holism is of crucial importance to the humanistic approach which attempts to answer the question of what it truly means to be fully human.
  • Since this approach focuses in subjective human experience whilst making no attempts to generate universal laws, it favours the idiographic
    approach.
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