Actualizing Tendency: Difference between revisions
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"On the basis of my experience I have found that if I can help bring about a climate marked by genuineness, prizing, and understanding, then exciting things happen. Persons and groups in such a climate move away from rigidity and toward flexibility, away from static living toward process living, away from dependence toward autonomy, away from defensiveness toward self-acceptance, away from being predictable toward an unpredictable creativity. They exhibit living proof of an actualizing tendency."<ref>Rogers, Carl. ''A Way of Being''. Houghton Mifflin, 1980.</ref>{{endstuff}} | |||
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[[Is a term::Carl Rogers| ]] | [[Is a term::Carl Rogers| ]] | ||
[[Is a key term::Self| ]] | [[Is a key term::Self| ]] | ||
Latest revision as of 13:46, 17 December 2025
Actualizing Tendency
According to Carl Rogers, the Actualizing Tendency "is the inherent tendency of the organism to develop all its capacities in ways which serve to maintain or enhance the organism. It involves not only the tendency to meet" the ... Seven Essential Needs ... but also more generalized activities. It involves development toward the differentiation of organs and of functions, expansion in terms of growth, expansion of effectiveness through the use of tools, expansion and enhancement through reproduction. It is development toward autonomy and away from heteronomy, or control by external forces.[1]
Concept Map
Carl Rogers Terms
Actualizing Tendency, Client-Centered Therapy, Congruence, Fully Functioning Person, Growth Hypothesis, Ideal Self, Self, Self-Structure, Tendency Towards Self-Actualization
Key Terms
Self > Actualizing Tendency, Ideal Self, Self-Structure, Tendency Towards Self-Actualization
Syncretic Terms
Related LP Terms
Non-LP Related Terms
Notes
Quotes
"On the basis of my experience I have found that if I can help bring about a climate marked by genuineness, prizing, and understanding, then exciting things happen. Persons and groups in such a climate move away from rigidity and toward flexibility, away from static living toward process living, away from dependence toward autonomy, away from defensiveness toward self-acceptance, away from being predictable toward an unpredictable creativity. They exhibit living proof of an actualizing tendency."[2]==Citation and Legal== Treat the SpiritWiki as an open-access online monograph or structured textbook. You may freely use information in the SpiritWiki; however, attribution, citation, and/or direct linking are ethically required.
Footnotes
- ↑ Rogers, Carl R. “A Theory of Therapy, Personality, and Interpersonal Relationships, as Developed in the Client-Centered Framework.” In Psychology: A Study of a Science. Study 1, Volume 3: Formulations of the Person and the Social Context, edited by Sigmund Koch. McGraw-Hill, 1959. p. 196.M
- ↑ Rogers, Carl. A Way of Being. Houghton Mifflin, 1980.
