is the result of an evolutionary process begun more than 70 years ago that
continues to remain open to change and refi nement (see Cain & Seeman, 2002;
Cain, 2010). For a detailed review of the development of Rogers’s approach
over the past 55 years, see Bozarth, Zimring, and Tausch (2002) and Zimring
and Raskin (1992).
THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN EXISTENTIAL THERAPY
AND HUMANISTIC PSYCHOLOGY
Some key concepts of existential therapy overlap with the humanistic themes
put forth by Rogers and others. Indeed, Rogers constructed his notions of therapeutic
practice on existential principles about what it means to be human, the
balance between freedom and responsibility, and the client–therapist relationship
as a key to change. Both person-centered therapy and Gestalt therapy (the
subject of Chapter 11) are experiential, humanistic, phenomenological, and
existentially oriented
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