Humanistic and Existential Aspects of Personality - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 33
About This Presentation
Title:

Humanistic and Existential Aspects of Personality

Description:

Area of philosophy concerned with the meaning of ... Martin Heidegger (1962) ... Our relationship comes from our relationships with others (Martin Buber, 1937) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:995
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 34
Provided by: cop1
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Humanistic and Existential Aspects of Personality


1
Humanistic and Existential Aspects of Personality
  • Theories of Personality
  • Prepared by Jim Messina, Ph.D.

2
Humanistic/Existential Theorists
  • Erich Fromm
  • Carl Rogers
  • Rollo May
  • Victor Frankl
  • Abraham Maslow

3
Existentialism
  • Area of philosophy concerned with the meaning of
    human existence
  • Asking questions about issues of love, death and
    the meaning of life
  • How one deals with the sense of value and
    meaning of ones life

4
Being-in-the-World
  • Martin Heidegger (1962)
  • Nothing would exist in the world if people were
    not here to see it vs laws govern all behaviors
    and the behaviors their laws exist no matter if
    there people there at the time
  • If a tree fell in a forest, and there was no one
    to hear it, would the tree make noise?

5
Existentialists Believe
  • The world changes as peoples ideas about it
    change.
  • Ideas of world human construction
  • Beings-in-the-World Self cannot exist without
    a world and the world cannot exist without a
    person (a being) to perceive it
  • Must study human beings in their worlds

6
Existentialists Dont ask why- Just accept what
is
  • Do not consider why questions but
  • They consider that statements
  • They do not ignore or explain away the issues of
    man such as ethics or morals
  • They do not concern themselves with the conflict
    of choosing ethics or morals but rather accept
    that it is essential part of humans to do so

7
Phenomenological
  • Peoples perceptions or subjective realities are
    considered to be valid data for investigation
  • Phenomenological discrepancy two people
    perceiving save situation differently

8
Nondeterministic
  • Existentialist argue that it is an
    oversimplification to view people as controlled
    by fixed physical laws
  • People cannot be viewed simply as cogs in a vast
    machine
  • Encouragement of theories that consider
    individual initiative, creativity,
    self-fulfillment
  • Focus on active, positive aspects of human growth
    and achievement

9
Humanism
  • Philosophical movement that emphasizes worth of
    the individual and the centrality of human values
  • Attends to matters of ethics personal worth
  • Gives credit to the human spirit
  • Emphasis on creative, spontaneous active nature
    of humans-optimistic
  • Human capacity to overcome hardship despair

10
Dialectical Tension
  • People having contradictory traits which produce
    this tension
  • Dialectic process by which two contradictory
    forces or tendencies lead to a resolution or
    synthesis
  • E.g. masculine feminine inclinations,
    extroverted introverted etc.

11
I-Thou dialogue vsI-It dialogue
  • Our relationship comes from our relationships
    with others (Martin Buber, 1937)
  • I-thou human confirms the other person as being
    of unique value-direct mutual relationships
  • I-it person uses others but does not value them
    for themselves-utilitarian

12
Human Potential Movement
  • Begun in 1960s
  • Use small group meetings, self-disclosure,
    introspection
  • People realize their inner potentials
  • Encounter groups, massage, meditation,
    consciousness raising, communing with nature,
    organic food
  • E.g. Environmental concerns, Quality Circles,
    Team self-management

13
Erich Fromm 1900-1980
  • Born Frankfurt Germany
  • Only child of Orthodox Jews
  • Raised in Christian community experienced
    clannishness Anti Semitism
  • Anxious Moody father / Depression prone mother
    he was unbearable neurotic as child
  • A woman, he was attracted to when 25, committed
    suicide-triggered need for psychoanalysis

14
Dialectical Humanism
  • Reconciliation of the biologically driven and
    the societally pressured sides of human beings
    with the belief that people can rise above or
    transcend, these forces and become spontaneous,
    creative loving

15
Existential Needs-Fromms
  • These needs must be met if ones existence is to
    be meaningful, ones talents are to be fully
    exploited, abnormality is to be avoided

16
Fromms 8 Existential Needs
17
Carl Rogers 1902-1987
  • Born Oak Park, Illinois
  • Fourth of six children
  • Fundamental religious practices, little social
    mixing, belief virtue Hard Work
  • Solitary boy, outstanding student
  • Studied in Seminary, became child psychologist
    influenced by Adlers concepts of work with
    children and families
  • Emphasized taking personal responsibility for
    ones own life

18
The Experiencing Person
  • Important issues must be defined by
    individual-special concern are discrepancies
    between what a person thinks of himself total
    range of things he experiences
  • People tend to develop in a positive direction,
    that unless thwarted, they achieve their
    potential
  • Belief in natural goodness of people-Rousseau
  • Inner self-control is better than forced,
    external control

19
Rogerian Therapy Client-Centered Therapy
  • Necessary conditions from therapist to client
  • Unconditional positive regard for client
  • Accurate empathy, understanding of clients
    frame of references and communicates this to the
    client
  • Congruence in relations between therapist
    client -being oneself in the therapeutic
    relationship with client

20
Stages of Rogerian Client-Centered Therapy
  • 1. Clients communications about externals not
    self
  • 2. Client describes feelings but not recognize
    or own them personally
  • Client talks about self as an object in terms of
    past experiences
  • 4. Client experiences feelings in present-just
    describes them with distrust fear
  • 5. Client experiences and expresses feelings
    freely in present-feeling bubble up
  • 6. Client accepts own feelings in immediacy and
    richness
  • 7. Client trusts new experiences relates to
    others openly freely

21
Rollo May
  • Sees anxiety triggered by a threat to ones core
    values of existence
  • A sense of powerlessness follows
  • Had polio as young man-long term
    institutionalization-isolation anxiety
  • Sees human journey as a noble and dignifying one

22
Victor Frankl
  • Emphasizes the benefits of personal choice
  • If people choose to grow develop s anxiety
    which can lead to self-fulfillment
  • Was in Nazi concentration camp-found meaning in
    suffering adopting responsibility to control
    what life was lef him
  • Developed logotherapy-search for meaning of
    existence

23
Self-Actualization
  • Innate process by which a person tends to grow
    spiritually and realize potential
  • First proposed by Jung-through self-exploration
    person could live in harmony with nature and all
    of humanity by integrating various psychic forces
    to become whole person-selfish drives could be
    explored, understood integrated with the
    spiritual aspects of human

24
Teleology Jung 1933
  • Idea that there is a grand design or purpose in
    ones life
  • Quasi-religious, spiritual integrations are key
    part of human nature

25
Abraham Maslow 1908-1970
  • Born Brooklyn, New York City 1908-Russian Jewish
    Family, mother 1st cousin of father
  • Oldest of 7 children
  • Mother-cold, vicious, superstitiously religious
    abusive to son-threats of divine
    retributionreligion is a form of superstition
  • Absent father-worked all the time-father in
    depression became ward of his son-they became
    friends
  • Suffered from anti-Semitism, poor body image

26
Peak Experience
  • Special moment when everything seems to fall into
    place
  • People transcend the self and are at one with the
    world
  • Completely self-fulfilled
  • Positive meaningful experience

27
Self-actualized People
  • Spiritually fulfilled
  • Comfortable with themselves others
  • Loving creative
  • Realistic productive
  • People with ideal healthy lives
  • Realistic knowledge of self accept self
  • Independent, spontaneous playful
  • Establish deep intimate relationships
  • Have a love for human race
  • Non-conformists but highly ethical

28
(No Transcript)
29
Organismic
  • Assumes unfolding or life course of each organism
  • Push for self-actualization comes from within
    humans rather than from outside
  • Push for self-actualization is not necessary for
    survival
  • Evolved tendency of humans for growth is assumed

30
Maslows Hierarchy of Needs
31
(No Transcript)
32
Maslows Organismic Deficiency Needs
  • D needs deficiency needs for survival
  • Survival-Physiological food, water, sex
    shelter
  • Safety-Security predictable world, work,
    training, money to pay rent, etc
  • Love-Belongingness intimate relationships
  • Esteem respect for oneself others
  • B needs, values being level correct social
    conditions needed to encourage self-actualization

33
Personal Orientation Inventory (POI) Shostrum 1974
  • Assessment of self-actualization-does work but it
    is
  • Self-report questionnaire so it measures what
    Maslow expected these people to have
  • Explores dimensions of self-actualization
  • Intimate relationships
  • Spontaneous vs inhibited etc
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com