"Similarities between carl jung and carl rogers" Essays and Research Papers

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    Case Study 19 – Carl Rogers 1. How did Katharine’s self-concept differ from her ideal self before her experience with her support group? What does this imply about her mental health‚ according to Rogers’ theory? a. Katharine’s ideal self is a woman who is self-sufficient‚ an entrepreneur‚ and a mother as well as wife. Prior to attending her support group‚ Katharine’s life lacked any positive self-regard. She had been living as a ‘kept’ woman at her husband’s insistence for many years

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    1 An Analysis of Carl Rogers’ work with Gloria: An article review by XXXXX XXXXX MSC-502: Counseling Theories and Techniques Instructor: Dr. Michael Bundy 2 “An Analysis of How Carl Rogers Enacted Client-centered Conversation with Gloria” carefully studies the recently re-analyzed and amended transcript from the classic training film “Three Approaches to Psychotherapy” for evidence that Rogers’ conversational devices utilized during this famous exchange are ripe with enactments of the core conditions

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    Carl Rogers (1902-1987) was ‘the most influential psychologist in American history’ (Kirshenbaum‚ 1989:11). Since the study of personality began‚ personality theorists have offered a wide assortment of explanations about behaviour and about what constructs a person. Carl Rogers was the main originator of the ‘person centred’ approach‚ also referred to as the ‘nondirective’ or ‘client centred’ approach. This essay will offer a brief description about some of the main concepts in Carl Rogers’ person

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    Although a lot of compelling theories and counseling techniques were presented throughout the unit‚ I will focus my attention on the Person-Centered Approach/Therapy developed by Carl Rogers. Person-Centered Approach changed the nature of counseling‚ as well as the counselor-client relationship‚ making Rogers a true change agent in his profession. Prior to his approach‚ the therapist was perceived as the "expert" in the notion that "the therapist know best." The helper was assumed to know what was

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    Carl Jung and Sigmund Freud: Early Influences Duncan Harris Southern New Hampshire University Psychology of Personality Dr. Doran March 24‚ 2013 Carl Jung and Sigmund Freud – two of the best known names in psychiatry - each had tremendous roles in the field of psychoanalysis. Born nearly twenty years apart‚ they met in 1907 (Kendra Cherry )‚ and their first conversation was rumored to have lasted thirteen hours‚ they had such a good rapport. Jung soon worked under Sigmund Freud and they

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    Carl

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    into an experiment which may screw it up without us being accountable for them Diffusion: The spread of a cultural trait from one society to another through social contact Acculturation: The process of contact‚ exposure‚ and exchange of ideas between different cultures that results in adaptations and changes to both groups Wednesday September 5‚ 2012 Strip-Search Case Closed? Summary: An 18 year old girl with worked at McDonalds was forced to strip then perform a sexual act in the back office

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    the Personality: Carl Gustav Jung</b></center> <br> <br><li>Introduction <br>Carl Gustav Jung (1875-1961) was born on July 26‚ in the small village of Kesswil on Lake Constance. He was named after his grandfather‚ a professor of medicine at the University of Basel. He was the oldest child and only surviving son of a Swiss Reform pastor. Carl attended the University of Basel and decided to go into the field of psychiatry after reading a book that caught his interest. <br> <br>Jung became an assistant

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    Case Study 3: Carl Jung

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    Provide evidence for your answer. How does it influence his behavior? Archetypes are themes that exist in all cultures‚ and they are rooted within the entire psyche (primarily in the consciousness and the collective unconsciousness)‚ according to Jung. “The Self” has likely primarily influenced Bob. The reason for this statement is because the self-archetype is characterized by realizing a destiny through a process called individuation‚ which is when a person becomes the definite‚ unique being that

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    Carl Jung “The Collective Unconscious” According to Carl Jung‚ "the collective unconscious is a universal datum‚ that is‚ every human being is endowed with this psychic archetype layer since his/her birth. One cannot acquire these strata by education or other conscious effort because it is innate. Carl Jung extended Freud’s theory of the unconscious. While he agreed that each of us has conflicts and associations relevant to our own history‚ he felt that the unconscious goes further. He also believed

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    Person-centered theory is regarded as one of the most popular theories of counseling and therapy since its development in the 1940s. Its originator‚ Carl Rogers originally labeled it as nondirective. The theory was intended to offer a distinctive option to the behavioral and psychoanalytic theories that subjugated psychology during the period. At a later time‚ Rogers expanded the concepts of the process and renamed it client-centered to de-emphasize the nondirective nature and emphasize a full understanding

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