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Humanistic Psychology
Humanistic psychology emerged in the 1950s in reaction to both behaviorism
and psychoanalysis. It is concerned with the subjective experience of
human beings, and views using quantitative methods in the study of the
human mind and behaviour as misguided. This is in direct contrast to cognitivism
(which aims to apply the scientific method to the study of psychology),
an approach of which humanistic psychology has been strongly critical.
Instead, the discipline stresses a phenomenological view of human experience,
seeking to understand human beings and their behavior by conducting qualitative
research.
The humanistic approach has its roots in existentialist thought (see
Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, Heidegger, and Sartre). The founding theorists
behind this school of thought are Abraham Maslow, who presented a "hierarchy
of needs"; Carl Rogers, who created and developed 'Person centred
psychotherapy' and Fritz and Laura Perls who helped create and develop
Gestalt therapy. Gestalt psychologists claim to consider behaviour holistically—"the
whole is greater than the sum of its parts"—although critics
such as Karl Popper have presented forceful arguments against the proposition
that entities can be apprehended as wholes.
Humanistic psychologists use a narrow definition of humanism. The American
Humanist Association, for example, has had as members many psychologists
whom humanistic psychologists would not consider humanist, B.F. Skinner
being perhaps a prominent example.
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