"Humanistic tradition" Essays and Research Papers

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    us to heal ourselves; by discovering our own capabilities and so doing‚ we are able to find solutions to problems that plague us. In this essay‚ I shall discuss the meaning of Person Centred Therapy and the three basic principles of Carl Roger’s humanistic therapy‚ which

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    Humanistic perspective is used to help other individuals develop empathy. Unlike sympathy‚ empathy requires the individual to listen the other persons opinion this includes to be in tune with their feelings and respect for their personality and what they believe in. However‚ this approach is not the easiest‚ not every individual can understand someone’s behaviour. However‚ if respect is given to the service user or service provider this includes the understanding of the issue it’s can make the service

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    Existential Therapy

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    I have chosen to compare Existential Therapy and Person-Centered Therapy. I found that these styles of therapy were similar in a lot of ways but they are also individual in ways. Existential Therapy unlike some therapies was not established by one individual. This therapy was born of many schools of thought and philosophies (Corey‚ 2009). At a time when psychologists and psychiatrists were pondering how to help others overcome their obstacles‚ existential thought began to form. One of the

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    Word count - 2553 Evaluate the claim that Person-centred Therapy offers the therapist all that he/she will need to treat clients. In this essay I am going to look at whether person-centred therapy offers the therapist all they will need to treat a client. I am firstly going to focus on a brief history of person-centred therapy‚ then look at the characteristics and key elements of person-centred therapy. Once I have done this I shall look at criticisms of person-centred therapy from other

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    Carl Rogers

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    Carl Rogers Carl Rogers is known today as one of the most popular and influential American psychologists and is among the founders of the humanistic approach to psychology. He was born on January 8‚ 1902 in Oak Park‚ Illinois‚ a suburb of Chicago. He was one of six children to Walter Rogers and Julia Cushing. His father was a very successful civil engineer and his mother was a housewife‚ as many women were during this time period. At the age of twelve‚ Carl Rogers and his family moved to a farm

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    English

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    communicative social acts" (24). But because Julien would both sniff at the idea of associating the oral with Africa‚ while simultaneously acknowledging the fact that "there is a continuity in African verbal arts The artists are creatures of culture‚ their traditions are in them and inform their works" (25)‚ she engages in too much special pleading‚ betraying a defensiveness or protectionism toward Africa and the oral which is as objectionable as the Eurocentric prejudices that she attacks. If we are

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    subject at all without the fear of being judged.    Essentially‚ stage one of Egan’s helping model is the storytelling phase.   It allows the therapist to explore and be understanding of the clients’ situation‚ utilising skills drawn from the humanistic approach to counselling.   Stage one is further broken down into three separate phases. Initially‚ the client should be provided with a safe environment where they can tell their story in their own way. As this is very early in the relationship

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    dario fo

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    Oral Tradition‚ 15/1 (2000): 26-38 Dario Fo and Oral Tradition: Creating a Thematic Context1 Antonio Scuderi A historical analysis‚ especially a critical one‚ of an actor’s techniques is impossible if the actor does not have “poetics.” It is by means of “poetics”—in the themes by which it is developed—that the “techniques” acquire depth and meaning and become a “style.” Totò2 has a poetics that is rich in themes and motifs that weave and dovetail‚ presenting a whole and complex vision

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    Person Centred Approach

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    Explore the Person Centred approach in relation to counselling practice The roots of the Person Centred approach‚ now considered a founding work in the Humanistic school of psychotherapies‚ began formally with Carl Rogers in the 1950’s. Dealing in the ’here and now’ and not on the childhood origins of the client’s problems‚ basic assumptions of the Person Centred approach state that clients are essentially trustworthy; that they have a vast potential for understanding themselves and resolving

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    In Walter Benjamin’s book Illuminations‚ two particular chapters are relevant to the corpus of works that make up film study. “Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproductions” and “The Storyteller” outline a progressive history from oral traditions to the modern traditions such as film that resulted and the bumps that have been encountered along the way. Central to these two chapters is the idea of aura. Aura‚ though difficult to define‚ is a concept that is easy to perceive because of its engaging qualities

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