Actions

Growth Hypothesis: Difference between revisions

An Avatar.Global Resource

Created page with "{{navmenu}} <h1 class="customtitle">{{FULLPAGENAME}}</h1> <blockquote class="definition">In Rogers’ person-centered / Client-centered Therapy, the '''Growth Hypothesis''' is the working assumption that most (and likely all) people possess inherent “growth forces”—an actualizing tendency toward development, integration, and more mature functioning—and that, when a sufficiently facilitative climate is present, people can find their own next steps toward healt..."
 
No edit summary
Line 10: Line 10:
{{#ask:[[Is a term::Carl Rogers]]}}
{{#ask:[[Is a term::Carl Rogers]]}}


===Related LP Terms==
===Related LP Terms===


[[Growth Hypothesis]] > {{#ask:[[Is a related LP Term::Growth Hypothesis]]}}
[[Growth Hypothesis]] > {{#ask:[[Is a related LP term::Growth Hypothesis]]}}


===Non-LP Related Terms==
===Non-LP Related Terms==

Revision as of 15:38, 15 December 2025

Growth Hypothesis

In Rogers’ person-centered / Client-centered Therapy, the Growth Hypothesis is the working assumption that most (and likely all) people possess inherent “growth forces”—an actualizing tendency toward development, integration, and more mature functioning—and that, when a sufficiently facilitative climate is present, people can find their own next steps toward healthier, more reality-congruent (Aligned and Connected) living without the therapist directing them through advice, interpretation, or persuasion. Rogers later clarified that “unaided” does not mean “without relationship,” but rather without directive interventions; the growth-promoting climate is precisely what releases this capacity

Concept Map

Carl Rogers Terms

Client-Centered Therapy, Congruence, Fully Functioning Person, Growth Hypothesis

Related LP Terms

Growth Hypothesis > Growth Mode

=Non-LP Related Terms

Growth Hypothesis >

Syncretic Terms

Growth Hypothesis >

Notes

Quotes

"...in most if not all individuals there exist growth forces, tendencies toward self-actualization, which may act as the sole motivation for therapy. . . . The individual has the capacity and the strength to devise, quite unaided, the steps which will lead him to a more mature and more comfortable relationship to his reality."

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