Carl Rogers--dialogues: Conversations with Martin Buber, Paul Tillich, B.F. Skinner, Gregory Bateson, Michael Polanyi, Rollo May, and OthersOffers a brief profile of Rogers, and shares his discussions with theologians and psychologists issues in psychotherapy. |
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Page 92
... agree with Dr. Rogers , it releases resources of the indi- vidual which are quite lost under aversive control . Those are the three things I wanted to mention . We agree that behavior is controlled , but I want to interpret that broadly ...
... agree with Dr. Rogers , it releases resources of the indi- vidual which are quite lost under aversive control . Those are the three things I wanted to mention . We agree that behavior is controlled , but I want to interpret that broadly ...
Page 129
... agree is in our view of the vast untapped po- tentialities of the human organism that have never been fully released or fully developed . Though we might take somewhat different pathways to it , I think we are in real agreement on that ...
... agree is in our view of the vast untapped po- tentialities of the human organism that have never been fully released or fully developed . Though we might take somewhat different pathways to it , I think we are in real agreement on that ...
Page 196
... agree . ( Rogers laughs . ) BATESON : All right , not obviously , but I do agree . And I agree that from where I sit , dealing with university students and gradu- ate students , about half my problem , perhaps more , is in dealing with ...
... agree . ( Rogers laughs . ) BATESON : All right , not obviously , but I do agree . And I agree that from where I sit , dealing with university students and gradu- ate students , about half my problem , perhaps more , is in dealing with ...
Contents
Introduction 39 | 3 |
ClientCentered Therapy by Carl Rogers | 9 |
Martin Buber | 41 |
Copyright | |
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Carl Rogers Dialogues: Conversations with Martin Buber, Paul Tillich, B.F ... Carl Ransom Rogers No preview available - 1990 |
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able accept agree attitudes aware B. F. Skinner basic BATESON become behavioral sciences believe Buber Carl Rogers client Client-Centered Therapy concept context Counseling culture deal described dialogue effective ence evil example exist existential experience experiencing fact feel freedom going Gregory Bateson Hans Hofmann human behavior humanistic psychology important individual inner interested issue kind knowledge living man's Martin Buber Mary Catherine Bateson mean Michael Polanyi nature Niebuhr Paul Tillich perhaps perience person philosophy point of view POLANYI problem psychoanalysis psychotherapy question reinforcement Reinhold Niebuhr relationship responsible Rollo schizophrenics scientific scientist seems self-love sense significant learning situation Skinner social sort speak subjective sure talking teach theological theory therapeutic therapist things thought Tillich tion true truth trying unconditional positive regard understand University valuing process whole word