Term
What is the goal of existential therapy? |
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Definition
Reveal the truth about yourself by facilitating your experiencing the truth |
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Term
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Definition
the focus of philosophical thought should be to deal with the conditions of existence of the individual person and his or her emotions, actions, responsibilities, and thoughts. |
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Term
According to existential philosophy where are we in our existence? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
Phenomenology is the study of structures of consciousness as experienced from the first-person point of view. The central structure of an experience is its intentionality, its being directed toward something, as it is an experience of or about some object. |
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Term
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Definition
Noumena are objects or events known only to the mind - independent of the senses. |
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Term
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Definition
an observable event or physical manifestation capable of being observed by one or more of the five human senses |
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Term
According to existential philosophy what composes being? |
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Definition
Subjectivity determines being |
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Term
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Definition
humans generate knowledge and meaning from an interaction between their experiences and their ideas. |
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Term
What is Kant's categorical imperative? |
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Definition
Act according to those maxims that you could will to be universal law |
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Term
What are Kant's hypothetical goods? |
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Definition
Any statement that requires an "if" to make the statement good (Sunshine is good "if" its not raining) |
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Term
According to Kant what is transcendence? |
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Definition
Transcendence is this process of uniting our conscious with the objective space in which it exists and transcend its conceptual limits. |
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Term
According to Kant what is freedom? |
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Definition
freedom is an independence of the will of motivations, character, and external causes |
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Term
According to Franz Brentano what is the object of psychology? |
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Definition
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Term
What is Franz Brentano theory of intentionality? |
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Definition
Source --> Aim --> Object |
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Term
What is Husserl talking about when he says that meanings are constituted? |
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Definition
Husserl called the intentional activity of consciousness "object-constituting subjectivity" by which all meanings are "constituted," that is, disclosed and made manifest. |
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Term
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Definition
thought or what is thought about |
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Term
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Definition
understanding, as the ability to sense, or know something, immediately |
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Term
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Definition
describes the theoretical moment where all judgments about the existence of the external world, and consequently all action in the world, are suspended. |
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Term
According to Husserl what is the systematic procedure of phenomenological reduction |
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Definition
one is thought to be able to suspend judgment regarding the general or naive philosophical belief in the existence of the external world, and thus examine phenomena as they are originally given to consciousness. |
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Term
What is Husserl's approach to Existentialism? |
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Definition
He advocated a methodology of detachment, standing back and away from human experience in order to better understand it — quite the opposite from the existentialist insistence that one engage as much as possible with human experience in order to understand what meaning can be created |
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Term
According to Husserl what are intentional acts? |
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Definition
Intentional acts are relational and interpretive |
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Term
According to Husserl what is the true mystery? |
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Definition
The manner of consciousness (rather than the unconscious) is the “true mystery” |
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Term
According to Husserl what is the foundational science? |
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Definition
phenomenology is “first philosophy” and is “foundational” for all knowledge |
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Term
What is ethical existentialism? |
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Definition
Existentialist ethics is characterized by the emphasis on moral individualism. Rather than seeking a “highest good” that would be universal, existentialists have sought means for each individual to find the highest good for them, regardless of whether it might ever apply to anyone else at any other time. |
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Term
How does freedom work according to Kierkegaard? |
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Definition
Although we are strongly inclined to seek human freedom, contemplation of such a transcendence of all mental and bodily determinations tends only to produce grave anxiety in the individual person |
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Term
According to Kierkegaard what is authenticity? |
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Definition
Focusing on one thing rather than many |
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Term
According to Kierkegaard what is an authentic existence? |
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Definition
one must become more and more an individual and less and less a member of the "herd," or common humanity |
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Term
According to Kierkegaard what is dread? |
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Definition
dread is fundamentally what allows innocence--examplified in Adam before he ate of the tree of knowledge--to be "brought to its last extremity," or, in other words, to fall into the state of sin, whose essence, Kierkegaard later says, is guilt. innocence -->dread-->guilt |
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Term
According to Kierkegaard what is despair? |
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Definition
When the self is out of balance, i.e., has the wrong understanding of who it is because it conceives itself too much in terms of its own limiting circumstances (and thus fails to recognize its own freedom to determine what it will be) or too much in terms of what it would like to be, (thus ignoring its own circumstances), the person is in a state of despair |
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Term
According to Kierkegaard what is the finite? |
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Definition
limitations such as those imposed by one's body or one's concrete circumstances |
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Term
According to Kierkegaard what is the infinite? |
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Definition
those capacities that free us from limitations such as imagination |
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Term
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Definition
Ethical existentialism argues that responsibility for one’s values, decisions, and course of life is an inescapable fact. (But we often hide from that fact anyway!) |
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Term
According to Heidegger what is being? |
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Definition
Being is neither a thing nor a genus it follows that it cannot be defined according to logic |
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Term
What is the nature of being? |
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Definition
Whenever one thinks about anything, or makes an assertion, or even asks a question; some use is made of Being. |
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Term
According to Heidegger what are the three levels of knowledge of being and non-being? |
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Definition
presence, the unpresent dimensional background of presence, and as the differentiation of presence from its background |
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Term
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Definition
Being (existence not subject) |
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Term
According to Heidegger what determines nature? |
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Definition
Nature is not preordained |
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Term
According to Heidegger what is the essence of being? |
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Definition
Fulfilling our possibilities |
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Term
According to Heidegger what is the role of the subject-object dichotomy? |
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Definition
the dichotomy is only part of Dasein (it is a derivative) not the whole so it cant be the basis of being |
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Term
What is thrownness according to Heidegger? |
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Definition
We are thrown into the world and that our being-in-the-world is a thrownness |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
“environment” or “surrounding world”, represents the everyday world of human activity: its cares, concerns and ends. |
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Term
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Definition
man’s being in the world with others |
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Term
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Definition
our relationship with our self or our own-world. |
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Term
Who can experience being? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
the study of ones awareness of ones existence |
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Term
What does Heidegger say is our unique aspect of consciousness? |
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Definition
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Term
According to Heidegger what is the nature of being? |
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Definition
being is constructed based on relations, in this case our relations towards others, and observing how we relate to others |
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Term
What is the first level of being and non-being |
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Definition
being aware that you exist |
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Term
what is the second level of being and non being? |
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Definition
understanding that i may not exist |
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Term
what is the third level of being and non-being? |
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Definition
The awareness that i will not exist in the future |
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Term
What happens when we reach the third level of being and non-being? |
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Definition
we start asking ourselves "what am i now?" |
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Term
According to Heidegger when do we cease to exist? |
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Definition
When we arent truly engaged in our existence (numbing with tv or mindless talk) |
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Term
What is Heideggers truth of existence? |
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Definition
No preordained nature, we are always changing our existence in relation to ourselves and to others |
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Term
What does Heidegger say is the point of being alive, what does it mean to be authentic? |
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Definition
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Term
How do we fulfill our possibilities? |
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Definition
constantly assess where we are and where we are going, staying still means we dont exist |
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Term
What is Heideggers concept of individuality? |
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Definition
at a basic existential level we are individuals we come into the world and leave alone |
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Term
Why do humans have absolute freedom? |
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Definition
We have freedom to move outside of our existence and choose to engage or negate it |
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Term
What is Heidegger's authentic existence? |
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Definition
How we look at ourselves and others is a choice. Our moods and thoughts are choices. How others make us feel is a choice. |
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Term
According to Heidegger what is anxiety? |
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Definition
the realization that our cares and concerns can be different then what they currently are |
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Term
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Definition
A falling state where our anxiety is overcoming |
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Term
In verfallenstein what happens to the self? |
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Definition
We give up on living authentically and do what the masses want us to do (they self) |
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Term
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Definition
meaningless talk about nothing at all, at a basic level we stay away from communication. When we engage in prattle we are attempting to numb ourselves |
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Term
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Definition
Involves real, authentic communication from the heart. When we engage in discourse we communicate our genuine thoughts and perceptions of the world and about the person we are talking to |
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Term
Why do we all have the ability to live authentically? |
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Definition
We all have the ability to reflect, move outside of ourselves and make authentic decisions on how we want to be engaged |
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Term
What is the correlation between authenticity and age? |
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Definition
people become more authentic as they age. With age we gain a deeper awareness of our impending non-existence (death) |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
What is existential guilt? |
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Definition
The awareness that we have failed to live up to our potential |
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Term
What is the constricted Dosein? |
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Definition
Failure to illuminate certain parts of our existence/experience. There is no inherent meaning in our existence but we endow the world with meaning through our experiences |
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Term
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Definition
An active process through which we shed the light of our thought onto the world to endow it with meaning |
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Term
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Definition
A passive process, things/meanings simply reveal themselves to us. |
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Term
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Definition
One reason people might go to therapy. Failure to move pass a certain developmental level. When we experience it we are essentially stuck at the current developmental level. |
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Term
How does mood/pitch effect the way we view the world? |
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Definition
It is the emotional tone we use to view things. Some people are optimists/pecisimists etc. |
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Term
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Definition
The number of possibilities we see in front of us |
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Term
What are A Priori Ontological Structures? |
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Definition
A set way of viewing things in the world (is the world just/fair, are people just/fair etc.) |
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Term
Why do people come to therapy in the first place according to an exestential/phenomenological perspective? |
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Definition
We typically respond to our own freedom by denying it. This becomes existential anxiety, which is the starting place for therapy. One of the guiding principles then is to cultivate the anxiety in therapy. |
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Term
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Definition
Job of the therapist is to suspend their own assumptions so they can truly understand the world as it appears to the patient |
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Term
What are the goals of Existential therapy? |
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Definition
Cultivate anxiety, illuminate possibilities and expand horizon, therapist must show the patient they have stuck Dasien |
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Term
According to Rogers what is the phenomenal field? |
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Definition
all experiences available at a given moment, both conscious and unconscious |
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Term
According to Rogers what is therapy? |
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Definition
a process of freeing a person and removing obstacles so that normal growth and development can proceed and the client can become independent and self-directed |
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Term
According to Rogers when does neurosis emerge? |
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Definition
When the self-structure and ones organismic experience both seek actualization but the paths that they take conflict |
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Term
According to Rogers what are some characteristic experiences of neurosis? |
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Definition
Anxiety, tension, lack of clarity, lack of ownership over behavior, lack of energy |
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Term
According to Rogers what is mental health? |
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Definition
The "fully functioning person" |
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Term
According to Rogers when does psychological adjustment exist? |
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Definition
when the concept of self is such that all the sensory ad visiral experiences of the organism are assimilated on a symbolic level into a consistent relationship with the self |
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Term
What are Roger's two hallmarks of the fully functioning person? |
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Definition
First- Congruence- in the fully functioning person, the organism valuing process is fully operative. Second- psychologically well people have fuller relationships with others |
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Term
What is the starting place for Rogerian therapy? |
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Definition
Clarifying the phenomenal field. The goal of the therapy is to help them symbolize all of their experience |
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Term
What does Roger assume about actualization? |
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Definition
People naturally move toward actualization |
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Term
What is the role of threat in Rogerian therapy? |
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Definition
No threat can be present, only reflection, no judgement |
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Term
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Definition
love, it is how rogerian therapy is defined |
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Term
What is unconditional positive regard? |
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Definition
Nonjudgemental, nonposesive care for the client. Therapist accepts and prizes all aspects of the clients experience |
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Term
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Definition
Ability of the therapist to identify with the clients point of view, and bring it into their own internal frame of reference. Most important part of Rogerian therapy |
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Term
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Definition
Refers to the behavior of the therapist in Rogerian therapy. When genuine the therapist is real and true to himself. Does not put up a facade, therapist is truly engaged in the therapeutic encounter. |
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Term
What is reflective listening? |
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Definition
Therapist helps client get a true sense of their emotional experiences. |
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Term
What are the two aspects of reflective listening? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
to reflect back to the client what the therapist just heard. Rogerian therapist reflects back content and affect |
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Term
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Definition
Through amplification the therapist amplifies the emotions expressed by the client. Rogerian. |
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Term
What are the two parts of rogerian therapy? |
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Definition
reflective listening and trust in the client |
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Term
What is the distinction between reflection and interpretation? |
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Definition
The rogerian therapist aspires to reflect what the client brings to therapy. Through reflection the therapist intends to stick to the meaning. Through interpretation the therapist interprets emotions which rogerians say is bad because it brings them out of their experience. |
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Term
What are the complications of the rogerian approach? |
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Definition
Client may not have the mechanisms to move ahead in therapy. Cant disagree with client. |
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Term
What are the outcomes of rogerian therapy? |
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Definition
client is aware of their environment, both positive and negative aspects. Client develops set of goals and values. Clients report more positive affect, vitality, happiness, satisfaction. |
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Term
How do Rogerians work with children? Why cant they do it the normal way? |
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Definition
They are non-verbal so they do it through play |
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Term
Why do internalizing children suffer? |
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Definition
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Term
How do rogerians deal with internalizing children? |
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Definition
Attempt to bring their repressions to the front, by creating a free, liberating environment that permits the repressions to come forth |
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Term
Why do externalizing children suffer? Who are they? |
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Definition
They are the ones who cause problems in the world. They externalize all of their issues and cant control their impulses. |
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Term
How do rogerians deal with externalizing children? |
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Definition
Need to separate feelings from behaviors. Bring forth the feelings and then try to separate them from the behavior. |
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Term
How do Rogerians set limits on children's behavior? |
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Definition
Want children to express their unpleasant feelings but no the following behaviors. Set genuine rather than arbitrary limits. (Not dont destroy this toy because im in charge. Give meaningful rationale on why that limit is in place). Attempt to provide as much choice as possible. |
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Term
What is the largest impediment to actualization according to Rogers? |
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Definition
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Term
What is conventional learning? |
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Definition
Typical education. We learn a whole bunch of facts and then we get tested on them. Teacher decides on what material is valid/invalid |
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Term
What is student-centered learning? |
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Definition
Students want to learn. No quiz, no punishment. Learning is self-initiated and continued outside of the classroom. Material has personal relevance to children. |
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Term
What is an external locus of evaluation? |
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Definition
teachers decide what the students need to learn and then they evaluate them with a test |
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Term
What is an internal locus of evaluation? |
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Definition
Teachers discover students needs and are empathetic towards those needs. Still may be tests but there is choice around those tests. And by providing choice, the students can follow their own interests. |
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Term
What are the components of a student-centered learning environment? |
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Definition
Teachers must be genuine and they must express themselves. Teachers must be accessible. Teachers must empathize and trust that students want to learn. |
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Term
According to Rogers what is at the heart of bad relationships? |
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Definition
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Term
What are the two types of incongruence? |
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Definition
Interpersonal and intrapersonal |
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Term
What is intrapersonal incongruence? |
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Definition
Lack of clarity between awareness and experience? |
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Term
What is interpersonal incongruence? |
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Definition
lack of congruence between awareness and communication |
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Term
according to the law of interpersonal relationships what is at the heart of all interpersonal incongruence?? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
Allowing others to see themselves truthfully |
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Term
What was the progression of Rogers' as a psychologist? |
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Definition
Non-directive --> client-centered --> person-centered |
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Term
According to Rogers what is all behavior? |
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Definition
Telic- with purpose or reason |
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Term
According to Rogers what determines our behavior? |
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Definition
Our subjective, internal experiences |
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Term
According to Rogers what is the inherent motive of Humans? |
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Definition
To act in a unifying way, the purpose of which is to maintain and enhance the organism. this is a spontaneous process |
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Term
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Definition
The self is included in the organism but each part of our experience is not necessarily the self |
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Term
According to Rogers what impact to others values have on the self? |
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Definition
We adopt the values of others but they arent part of the self, they are part of the organism |
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Term
What are the two forms of positive regard? |
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Definition
unconditional and conditional |
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Term
What is unconditional positive regard? |
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Definition
means that you will always be loved regardless of behaviors, ideas and feelings |
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Term
What is conditional positive regard? |
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Definition
love is only given when values ad beliefs are in line with someone elses |
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Term
What are Rogers' three varieties of experiences? |
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Definition
Symbolized, ignored, distorted |
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Term
What is the symbolized variety of experience? |
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Definition
Non-threatening and non-conflicting, ideas arent in conflict with others loving us |
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Term
What is the ignored variety of experience? |
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Definition
Ignoring parts of our experience to make us more likable |
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Term
What is the distorted variety of experience? |
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Definition
distort our feelings, ideas to fit what others want to think of us, through distortion we actively change our experience |
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Term
According to Buddhism what is the nature of our existence? |
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Definition
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Term
What are the three forms of suffering? |
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Definition
old age, sickness and ultimately death |
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Term
How can we end suffering? |
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Definition
Although suffering exists we can end our suffering by (the solution does not involve rearranging material or monetary aspects of our existence): changing some personal aspect of ourselves |
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Term
What is Buddhism's take on god? |
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Definition
Buddhisms says that there is no absolute being (anatman). As it began to rise as a theory there was some recognition that there may be gods. However, even if gods do exist, they can do nothing to solve human suffering |
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Term
According to Buddhism what is the only way to understand being? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
philosophical explanation of impermenance |
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Term
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Definition
release from samsara (ending our existence) |
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Term
According to Buddhism how do most people live their lives? |
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Definition
From the budhist perspective most of us live our lives asleep, we live our lives with a strong belief of permanence and we attach ourselves to our existence because we think that its permanent |
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Term
How do we live a life free of delusion according to Buddhism? |
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Definition
To live a life free of delusion we must come in contact with our nature, meditate on it and understand our existence |
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Term
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Definition
the way in which we use language to give a false sense of permanence to some object. With language we project onto objects a certain sense of permanence. When we call someone a name we give them artificial permanence. |
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Term
What is the importance of meditation? |
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Definition
The importance of meditation is that it allows us to limit discursive thinking, and all thoughts that naturally arise in our minds. Through meditation we go beyong language to understand our impermanence |
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Term
How do we attain nirvana? |
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Definition
Nirvana cannot be put into language, to attain nirvana one simply needs to put into practice their beliefs. In nirvana all self-identity is removed. |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
What is the fundamental nature of the self? |
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Definition
The fundamental nature of the self is painful. The problem is that when we believe things are permanent we attach ourselves to those ideas. |
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Term
How are some ways people deal with pain in buddhism? |
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Definition
Cope through material possessions (mid-life crisis). Seek therapy/counseling. None of these things work because we see in others their mortality and we see in ourselves our own mortality and death takes from us our sense of permanence. And through death we are thrown back into samsara. |
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Term
How can we lift the veil of our delusions/attain enlightenment? |
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Definition
It is only through mindfulness that we can lift the veil of our delusions and enter nirvana/enlightenment |
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Term
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Definition
what we cultivate in the process of meditation. It involves being in touch with and aware of the present moment. When we are mindful we understand all internal and external experiences |
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Term
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Definition
our original natural mind. Each of us has the seeds of nirvana inherently in us, it is an innate part of our makeup. Peace/joy/nirvana are here for us as long as we remember to attain them. Through developing mindfulness we can enjoy joy at all times. |
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Term
What are the four noble truths? |
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Definition
Suffering (dukkha) characterizes life and is universal Desire and ignorance (attachment) cause suffering Three consuming fires—greed, hatred, delusion Elimination of desire is the elimination of suffering Elimination of desire entails the Eightfold Path |
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Term
What is the eightfold path? |
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Definition
Wisdom (prajna) Right understanding, Right view Behavior (sila) Right speech, Right action, Right livelihood Meditation (samadhi) Right mindfulness, Right effort, Right concentration |
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