Healthy Personality: An Approach from the Viewpoint of Humanistic Psychology |
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Page 123
... body . The way physicians , anatomists , and physiologists see the body , from the outside , has become the way in which schoolchildren and finally adults experience their bodies . We do not yet have a phenomenological anatomy and ...
... body . The way physicians , anatomists , and physiologists see the body , from the outside , has become the way in which schoolchildren and finally adults experience their bodies . We do not yet have a phenomenological anatomy and ...
Page 128
... body , the so - called body - ideal . Each person has a more or less clear concept of how he wants to look . If his body conforms in dimensions and appearance with his con- cept of an ideal body , he will then like his body . If his ...
... body , the so - called body - ideal . Each person has a more or less clear concept of how he wants to look . If his body conforms in dimensions and appearance with his con- cept of an ideal body , he will then like his body . If his ...
Page 133
... body - ideal can be assessed with respect to its healthy or unhealthy implications . An unhealthy body - ideal is one that is rigid and unchanging and that includes dimen- sions impossible for the individual to conform with . Thus , we ...
... body - ideal can be assessed with respect to its healthy or unhealthy implications . An unhealthy body - ideal is one that is rigid and unchanging and that includes dimen- sions impossible for the individual to conform with . Thus , we ...
Contents
Their Significance for Healthy | 2 |
The Generation of Death | 26 |
CONSCIOUSNESS AND HEALTHY PERSONALITY | 32 |
Copyright | |
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ability action activity anxiety Approach authentic awareness B. F. SKINNER basic needs become believe body called capacity challenge Chapter child chronic concept conscience consciousness defense developed dreams effective emotional ence experience experiencing expression feelings freedom Freud Fritz Perls function Gestalt Therapy growing guilt Harper & Row Hatha Yoga Healthy Personality human Humanistic Psychology ideal identity imagination individual interpersonal relationships Jung living lover marriage Maslow masturbation means moral mother motives O. H. MOWRER one's oneself parents partner patient perception personal growth personal relationships perspective possible problems prophet Psycho psychotherapist R. D. LAING reality religion religious repression responses roles S. M. JOURARD seek self-concept self-disclosure self-esteem self-structure sense sexual behavior social society somatic someone sonality spouse student suffering suppression taboos tension therapist therapy thinking tion uncon unconscious unhealthy values Viewpoint of Humanistic wishes Yoga York