Individual Behaviour: A New Frame of Reference for PsychologyHarper, 1949 - 386 páginas |
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Página 21
... individual's behavior , which has by postulation a one - to - one relationship with his phenomenal field , is open to observation . Therefore , from a study of the individual's behavior it is possible to reconstruct , by inference , his ...
... individual's behavior , which has by postulation a one - to - one relationship with his phenomenal field , is open to observation . Therefore , from a study of the individual's behavior it is possible to reconstruct , by inference , his ...
Página 180
... individuals . Eisenhower's decision against a second postponement of D - day , the decision of the Japanese cabinet to ... individual's behavior and the reasons for his choices . If the historian or anthropologist makes an adequate ...
... individuals . Eisenhower's decision against a second postponement of D - day , the decision of the Japanese cabinet to ... individual's behavior and the reasons for his choices . If the historian or anthropologist makes an adequate ...
Página 189
... individual members to maintain and enhance their own phenomenal selves . The effective factors in determining the individual's behavior toward society are , as for all behavior , his need , his phenomenal field at the moment of action ...
... individual members to maintain and enhance their own phenomenal selves . The effective factors in determining the individual's behavior toward society are , as for all behavior , his need , his phenomenal field at the moment of action ...
Índice
THE CHALLENGE TO PSYCHOLOGY | 3 |
II | 10 |
HOW BEHAVIOR CHANGES | 34 |
Direitos de autor | |
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Individual Behaviour: A New Frame of Reference for Psychology Donald Snygg,Arthur Wright Combs Visualização de excertos - 1949 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
able accept achieve activities adequate adult appear aspects attempts aware become behave characteristic child client clinical clinical psychologist common concept counselor culture deal degree differentiation discover effective enhance his phenomenal enological entiation environment example exist experience external approach external reality externally observed extremely factors failure feel frame of reference function havior important inadequate indi individual behavior individual's phenomenal inductive therapy infer instance interpretation learning less level of aspiration maintain meanings methods need satisfaction neurosis nomenal non-directive therapy occur organization perceived person phenom phenomenal field phenomenological point physical play therapy point of view possible prediction present principles problem Psychol psychology psychotherapy response result Rorschach satisfaction of need satisfy seems self-concept self-enhancement self-esteem sense fields situation social society tachistoscopic teacher tension Thematic Apperception Test therapist things threat threatening perceptions tion true unconditioned stimulus vidual