| J. Watt - 1989 - 278 lapas
...The basic nature of the human being, when functioning freely, is constructive and trustworthy. ... When we are able to free the individual from defensiveness,...reactions may be trusted to be positive, forwardmoving, constructive.35 The title of the book from which that passage is taken, On Becoming a Person, raises... | |
| Carl Ransom Rogers - 1989 - 548 lapas
...trustworthy. For me this is an inescapable conclusion from a quarter-century of experience in psychotherapy. When we are able to free the individual from defensiveness,...demands, his reactions may be trusted to be positive, forward moving, constructive. We do not need to ask who will socialize him, for one of his own deepest... | |
| John Steadman Rice - 268 lapas
...cultural and societal influences and effects, rather than to reproduce those influences and effects: "When we are able to free the individual from defensiveness,...that he is open to the wide range of his own needs . . . his reactions may be trusted to be positive, forward-moving, constructive."40 ACoA discourse... | |
| John Rowan - 2001 - 306 lapas
...held consistently by all those who are seen as central to humanistic psychology. Carl Rogers says: 'When we are able to free the individual from defensiveness, so that he is open to the wide range of environmental and social demands, his reactions may be trusted to be positive, forward-moving, constructive'... | |
| H. Jerome Freiberg - 1999 - 187 lapas
...trustworthy. For me this is an inescapable conclusion from a quarter century of experience in psychotherapy. When we are able to free the individual from defensiveness,...open to the wide range of his own needs, as well as to the wide range of environmental and social demands, his reactions may be trusted to be positive,... | |
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