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2019, Descriptive Psychology and The Person Concept
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8 pages
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“If green gas on the moon speaks to an astronaut, how do we know if it’s a person?” –Peter Ossorio Descriptive Psychology and the Person Concept maps the common ground of behavioral science. The absence of a shared foundation has given us fragmentation, a siloed state of psychological theory and practice. And the science? The integrity of choice, accountability, reason, and intention are necessary commitments at the cornerstone of civilization and any person-centered psychotherapy, but when taught along with a “scientific” requirement for reductionism and determinism, reside in contradictory intellectual universes. Peter Ossorio developed the Person Concept to remedy these problems. This book is an introduction to his work and the community of scientists, scholars, and practitioners of Descriptive Psychology. Ossorio offered these maxims that capture the discipline’s spirit: 1. The world makes sense, and so do people. They make sense to begin with. 2. It’s one world. Everything fits together. Everything is related to everything else. 3. Things are what they are and not something else instead. 4. Don’t count on the world being simpler than it has to be. The Person Concept is a single, coherent concept of interdependent component concepts: Individual Persons; Behavior as Intentional Action; Language and Verbal Behavior; Community and Culture; and World and Reality. Descriptive Psychology uses preempirical, theory-neutral formulations and methods, to make explicit the implicit structure of the behavioral sciences. The goal is a framework with a place for what is already known with room for what is yet to be found. Key Features • Provides a way to compare theories, coordinate empirical findings, and negotiate competent disagreement • Offers guidance for effective case formulation and integration of therapies • Explores the dilemmas of personhood and the complexities of human and nonhuman action, investigating “what is a person, and how can we be sure?” • Follows the implications of Hedonics, Prudence, Ethics, and Aesthetics as intrinsic perspectives and reasons for action • Applies these concepts to personality and social dynamics, consciousness, relationship change, emotional behavior, deliberation, and judgment • Provides a guide to establishing and restoring empathy––especially when it’s difficult
1. Understanding personhood: can we get there from here?
H an H F ! () B o a P e rs o n-C r: n t e r e d & E r p e r ie n t i ul P,t 1' r. h rs ! lte r tt p i 1's VoI. 10. No.4, December 2011.286 298 f;) Routledge fi \ Taylor&Francis Croup Towards a paradigm sliift in the person-centcred appronctrr T. Len l-Ioldstock* Ll/okinghnru, (iK {Re.e ived LJutucrr}; 20 I I ; .{inul t,er.siart receit,ed .t) l,Iarr,h 20 ll} In vielv of' tire resurgence of the narrative perspective in psycholog.v arrd the experiential en:phasis in the person-centered iipproaclr {pflA). ihe concept of-the sell underJying the IrCIA is discussetl in tenns of the geographical ancl cultirral conterts, lvhich influenced my pursuil o{'psychology as Ll hlman as rvell as a natural scicnce. DLrring this journe-y I ha'o,e movecl from a tracliticinai Western approach, locusin{r ot: the pcrson as an inilependent ;rnd selfl-sul]icient rrnit of the social s1,stetn. aud ttrre importance ol the sub-corticiLl iireas of the brain in behavior. to an ilwareness of the irriportance o{' tire inierrekLtedness ol the sell, especiallv in Afr:ican cultnre, and the implications it has f'or psychologlr. 'rlre focui on tlte indivjdual as att itLttonorror-rs entitv has been found rvanting iir alleviating the glotralii, grorving mental health crisis {tr't:'vt-Hatl ct Ilundretl yeat,s of' P,s.,-t'kothcrap.v' arrd tkc lI,'orkf',c Getting Ll/orse (L{ilhnan & vcntLrra. 1993). New paradigms are rer-iuircd 1ci tarrilitate con{licl resolution, not only at individual 1eveI, but also in a worlci thal is becornilg increasirigly f-ragrnented. in the new paradigm. rootn has to be lounrl lbr an iirterclependent model of rhe self that transcencls cultural bo uncliiries.
Journal for Person-Oriented Research
The first article in the present issue of JPOR is written by two pioneers in person-oriented research, John Nesselroade and Peter Molenaar. Among other things they argue that the individual is the primary unit of analysis for studying behaviour, and that this is in line with a growing emphasis on personalized diagnoses and treatment regimens in medicine, which reflects a renewed emphasis on focusing on the individual person. As was argued by Julia Moeller in a previous article in JPOR, however, psychological science seems to “lag behind” in this respect, with a concomitant risk of a credibility loss. One problem is that psychology still lack a coherent theoretical paradigm that places the person at the center of the stage. Some promising theoretical work on the concept of person has been carried out by researchers such as Mark Bickhard and Peter Ossorio, and it is possible that the future will see an increased cross-fertilization between (1) the theoretical development of a comprehe...
Empathy: From Breakdown to Breakthrough: Breakdowns give us access to breakthroughs. One important way that we know how empathy works is by knowing how empathy fails. If empathy did not sometimes breakdown or fail to work properly, then how could it ever work at all? The misfiring of empathy is part of the possibility of empathy's being useful and able to make a difference. Discover the four (4) characteristic breakdowns of empathy corresponding to empathic receptivity, empathic understanding, empathic interpretation, and empathic responsiveness.
Journal of personality disorders, 2006
Who is the person, or self, associated with personality disorder and its treatment? How are we to account for a self conceptualized in terms of schemas and representations, that at the same time--as self--scrutinizes these schemas and representations (as in cognitive therapy for personality disorders)? Five approaches to personhood are examined: metaphysical, empirical, transcendental, hermeneutical, and phenomenological. An elementary sense of selfhood is tied to all one's experiences and activities; this sense of self is experientially irreducible and conceptually connected to a primordial form of self-relatedness. After examining these issues, I formulate four provisional conclusions: (a) the separation between person and roles (functions, personality features) is a modern fiction--persons are not neutral bearers of roles and functions; (b) the concept of personality in DSM-IV refers to nonhomogeneous behaviors such as feelings, moods, inclinations, temperaments, and habits,...
Journal for Person-Oriented Research, 2019
Common conclusions from traditional psychotherapy research are that we still do not know how or why even our most well-studied interventions produce change, and that there is little evidence that any form of psychotherapy is generally more effective than any other. This has led some researchers to the so-called Dodo Bird Verdict, that all forms of psychotherapy are equally effective, and to the conclusion that what is at work are "common factors" that have little to do with treatment method. An alternative explanation, however, is that the traditional research paradigm is insufficiently sensitive to provide us with the required kind of knowledge. First, the outcome in typical RCTs is averaged across individuals, and at best complemented by a search for predictors in the form of stable individual differences. This means that this research stays at a group level of analysis and is insensitive to variation and change in individual patients. Second, the independent variable in RCTs does not consist in any well-controlled psychological intervention, but in large-scale treatment packages that contain a large number of interventions over a considerable time period. In other words, this research is insensitive to the effects of specific treatment interventions. Third, traditional psychotherapy research is insensitive to the therapist and patient as individual persons, and their specific interaction. It is argued that a person-oriented approach to psychotherapy, which is idio-graphic, holistic and interactional, may be able to overcome some of these problems by being more sensitive to (1) the treatment course of individual patients, and patterns during that course; (2) the effects of the specific interventions that are implemented over time, and (3) the personal characteristics of patient and therapist, and nuances of their interaction.
2020
I was trained in developmental, not clinical, psychology, and I do not practice psychotherapy. I study it. I study it because I find the therapeutic activity, in particular, the social therapeutic activity, to be fascinatingly paradoxicalsimultaneously exhilarating and tedious, intense and trivial, touchingly meaning making and incomprehensible, an extraordinary life-affirming creative act whose materials are often anything but life affirming. Moreover, as a researcher into human development, studying therapy has become important to me because of its developmental potential or, to use the terminology of the humanistic psychology tradition, its potential for experiences of actualization and transcendence. Since I began my research career, about thirty-five years ago, I've always studied things that are very difficult to study-some, I've discovered, even impossible to study-unless you go outside the bounds of the existing research paradigm. The first time I encountered this ...
Journal for Person-Oriented Research, 2015
Although the investigation of persons should be natural for psychological science by its inherent logic, this has not been the case in the history of the discipline, where selected other speciesrats, dogs, pigeons, and chimpanzeeshave been made to "stand in" for human beings. Consequently the knowledge of human psychological processes has been slow to advance, and recurrent calls for "bringing the person back" into psychology are needed. Moving beyond such calls, I distinguish the Person-Oriented and Person-Centered perspectives that both have had times of appearance, disappearance, and reappearance in the history of psychology. In the search for new forms of person-centered research, unpacking the processes that remain hidden behind the generic term relationship makes it possible to advance consistently qualitative perspectives on human life course. These processes operate at the border of the person and environment, and in the quest for understanding what happens at that border Person-Oriented and Person-Centered approaches of today are complementary.
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