Deck 9: The Humanistic Tradition

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Question
What was one of the global developments that contributed to the development of the humanistic perspective in personality psychology?

A) World War II
B) Vietnam War
C) Industrial Revolution
D) World War I
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Question
Early humanistic psychologists believed that

A) psychology had to stick to using experimental methods of investigation.
B) psychology must change its focus and embrace something more human.
C) psychology has to investigate the processes involved in conditioning principles.
D) psychology should not explain moral issues.
Question
What was the role of humanistic psychology in the human suffering found in society?

A) Humanism has no role in understanding human suffering.
B) Humanism must use its scientific wisdom to address societal problems.
C) Humanism should not try to understand a whole human being.
D) Humanism should explain societal suffering.
Question
What is the study of phenomena that distinguishes human beings such as love, happiness, and self-growth?

A) psychoanalysis
B) behaviorism
C) humanism
D) trait
Question
What personality tradition ignored consciousness and the world of the striving individual?

A) gestalt
B) trait
C) cognitive
D) behaviorism
Question
Which personality tradition promotes the idea that learning was a key influence in shaping the individual's actions?

A) psychoanalytic
B) humanism
C) behaviorism
D) gestalt
Question
Which personality tradition ignored the individuals' subjective experience?

A) psychoanalytic
B) humanism
C) behaviorism
D) trait
Question
Which personality tradition focused primarily on psychological anomalies?

A) psychoanalysis
B) behaviorism
C) humanism
D) trait
Question
Which personality perspective devalued the meaning of conscious purposeful acts?

A) existentialism
B) humanism
C) psychoanalysis
D) situationist
Question
The importance of individual responsibility, free choice, and intellectual freedom are fundamental forces guiding a person through life. This statement represents which tradition in personality psychology?

A) humanism
B) positive psychology
C) existential psychology
D) psychoanalysis
Question
What is the value orientation in psychology that holds a hopeful and constructive view of people and of their substantial capacity to be self-determining?

A) existential psychology
B) humanistic psychology
C) gestalt psychology
D) cognitive psychology
Question
What is the holistic perspective?

A) Individuals are uniquely human.
B) Individuals are rational.
C) Individuals are aware of their existence.
D) An individual is more than the sum of his or her habits, reflexes, mental operations or decisions.
Question
The holistic perspective in humanistic psychology is a criticism of which tradition in personality psychology?

A) psychoanalysis
B) cognitive
C) post-Freudian
D) behaviorism
Question
To say that individuals are aware of their own existence means that they

A) have consciousness.
B) are unique beings.
C) are rational.
D) do not have unconsciousness.
Question
What is "cosmic ecology"?

A) the individual's potential
B) the individual's general perspective on the world
C) the individual's inner world
D) the outcome for actualization
Question
According to humanistic psychologists, individuals are rational and knowledgeable. Thus, it would reason that individuals

A) are sensitive and caring.
B) are objective.
C) tend to be logical.
D) can exercise choices.
Question
A principle in humanistic psychology is that when an individual makes mistakes,

A) the individual is doomed to repeat the mistake.
B) the individual can either be rewarded or punished for it.
C) the individual learns from the mistake and is accountable.
D) the individual represses memories of it.
Question
Another principle of humanistic psychology is that by being aware of their goals,

A) individuals can fail to achieve them.
B) individuals can seek meaning, value, and creativity in their lives.
C) individuals do not have much freedom to do anything about them.
D) individuals must be prepared for the potential to fail.
Question
Humanistic psychology uses primarily what type of research methodology?

A) quantitative methods
B) qualitative methods
C) mixed methods
D) randomized designs
Question
What is the view humanistic psychology takes about the methodology of experiments?

A) Experiments do not allow in-depth study of one's self and so it should not be used.
B) Experiments tap into an unrelated set of behaviors.
C) Experiments take too long to run.
D) The use of experiments should be combined with nonexperimental methods.
Question
What is the intellectual tradition that focuses on an individual's uniqueness, free will, and responsibility?

A) behaviorism
B) psychoanalysis
C) gestalt
D) existentialism
Question
What is the central proposition of existentialism?

A) That individuals create their own meaning, roles, prescriptions, and values but do not necessarily fit well into these meanings.
B) That human beings are unfamiliar with using free will to their own advantage and therefore make mistakes.
C) That individuals need self-awareness to identify their free will and thus use it for achieving their potential.
D) That individuals are ignorant of free will and when they do have no guidance on how to use it to reach their potential.
Question
What does existentialism say about our existence?

A) It is optimistic.
B) It is filled with potential.
C) It is tragic and sad.
D) It is stressful.
Question
Existentialism asserts there is no meaning in life and attempts on people's part to find meaning is absurd. This position is called

A) deficit needs.
B) B values.
C) existential depression.
D) existential crisis.
Question
What are the results of finding no meaning in life according to existentialism?

A) death and destruction
B) chaos and confusion
C) anxiety and depression
D) pluralistic ignorance
Question
According to existentialism, work and making more money are

A) efforts to make life meaningful.
B) futile attempts to find meaning in life.
C) illusions of happiness.
D) the road to fulfilling one's potential.
Question
Joe believes working is the only meaning in life. He works hard, gets promoted, and earns a lot of money. Yet he is extremely dissatisfied with his life and feels very alone. According to existentialism, Joe has reached

A) a state of despair.
B) an existential crisis.
C) the meaning of life.
D) the illusion about life.
Question
According to existentialism, depression will lead to

A) fatigue.
B) ignorance and stupidity.
C) despair.
D) psychosis.
Question
Existential psychology focuses on

A) an individuals' experience as being unique, exceptional, and unrepeatable.
B) there is no possibility for individuals to improve themselves.
C) there is potential in only a few individuals depending on amount of self-insight.
D) the road to happiness as relatively easy.
Question
What does existential psychology believe about an individual's free will?

A) There is no free will in individuals; there's only the illusion that they have it.
B) Free will only become apparent when individuals achieve self-insight.
C) Individuals have free will and make choices and take responsibility for them.
D) Using one's free will lead to the path of happiness.
Question
Unlike existential philosophers, existential psychology is

A) exciting.
B) dull.
C) optimistic.
D) selective.
Question
According to existential psychology, self-improvement can be achieved through

A) work and play.
B) commitments in relationships.
C) changes in self-awareness.
D) therapy.
Question
According to existential psychology, self-consciousness leads to

A) happiness.
B) the meaning of life.
C) coping skills.
D) moral values.
Question
Rollo May asserted that anxiety is provoked by

A) lack of relationships.
B) lack of self-awareness.
C) fundamental technological and social changes.
D) ignorance.
Question
According to Rollo May, what is another source of anxiety?

A) lack of relationships
B) isolation
C) work and work expectations
D) threats to an individual's most fundamental family values
Question
According to Rollo May, what is one way to reduce anxiety?

A) take a vacation
B) meditate
C) rediscover the importance of caring for one another
D) pursue one's own goals
Question
According to Rollo May, what's the difference between anxiety and fear?

A) Nothing, they are both the same.
B) Fear is more manageable than anxiety because fear has an unidentifiable source.
C) The difference is in the magnitude of the effect they bring about for the individual.
D) Fear makes one powerless while anxiety makes one confused.
Question
Which of the following is not a way to handle fear as stated by Rollo May?

A) accept it
B) avoid it
C) confront it
D) deny it exist
Question
According to Maslow, what is a force within an organism that initiates and maintains behavior?

A) fear and anxiety
B) motivation
C) drive
D) growth
Question
Maslow described individuals' needs in a

A) circle.
B) flowchart.
C) hierarchy.
D) pie chart.
Question
Maslow's needs are grouped according to

A) potency.
B) relevance to one's values.
C) the current demands in society.
D) level of spirituality.
Question
How many needs are there in Maslow's theory?

A) 6
B) 3
C) 9
D) 5
Question
What are the Maslow's needs according to potency?

A) love, belongingness, physiological, esteem, safety
B) physiological, esteem, self-actualization, safety
C) physiological, safety, love, esteem, self-actualization
D) safety, esteem, love, physiological, self-actualization
Question
According to Maslow, once an individual has satisfied the cluster of needs at a particular level,

A) He or she can jump to any of the levels above it.
B) He or she will progress to the next level.
C) He or she can skip to the top.
D) He or she will not need to go back to that level again.
Question
Francisco is being recognized for his charitable work with the poor. Francisco has reached what level of Maslow's hierarchy of needs?

A) love
B) safety
C) self-actualization
D) esteem
Question
Meg wants to make sure she had locked the front door of her apartment this morning before she went to work. Meg is at what level of Maslow's hierarchy of needs?

A) love
B) esteem
C) safety
D) physiological
Question
The first four levels of Maslow's hierarchy of needs are called

A) growth needs.
B) fixed needs.
C) deficit needs.
D) urgent needs.
Question
What are rooted in the scarcity of something like food or esteem from others?

A) B-needs
B) D-needs.
C) D-needs
D) B-values .
Question
What is the highest stage of individual development and is governed by the search for truth, goodness, beauty, wholeness, justice, and meaningfulness?

A) self-actualization
B) happiness
C) optimism
D) the good life
Question
Which of the following below is not a characteristic of a self-actualized individual according to Maslow?

A) spontaneity and simplicity
B) need for privacy
C) deep interpersonal relations
D) authoritarian traits
Question
Maslow's research drew some criticism. Which of the following below was one of them?

A) Maslow's examples of self-actualized individuals were based on his own moral code.
B) Actualization is applicable to everyone else in the global arena.
C) There are three additional needs above actualization.
D) The needs are prioritized correctly.
Question
What is the state of complete concentration and joyful immersion in a situation or activity?

A) peak experiences
B) ecstasy
C) flow
D) actualization
Question
Who proposed that most of the behaviors that people learn are consistent with the subjective concept of the self?

A) Rollo May
B) Abraham Maslow
C) Carl Rogers
D) M. Csikzentmihalyi
Question
According to Rogers, people strive to make the best of their existence and value the high self-esteem and positive emotions toward the self called

A) positive self-regard.
B) self-esteem.
C) flow.
D) congruent self.
Question
According to Rogers, when do individuals experience incongruity?

A) When individuals behave according to their set of morals.
B) When individuals cannot make or maintain the high standards society sets up for individual behavior.
C) When individuals put their needs and devotion above everyone else's.
D) When individuals put themselves second to the community.
Question
Who are fully functioning individuals?

A) They put their needs before the needs of the community.
B) They put the community's needs before their own.
C) They value expression instead of conformity.
D) They are well balanced, well adjusted, and interested in learning and knowing.
Question
Humanistic psychology contributed to the tradition that studies the strengths and virtues that enable individuals and communities to thrive. What is this tradition called?

A) Maslow's psychology
B) positive psychology
C) client-centered psychology
D) gestalt psychology
Question
What contributed to the concept of positive mental health?

A) psychoanalysis
B) humanistic psychology
C) existential psychology
D) Maslow's hierarchy of needs
Question
What has become an important measure of social and economic development of a country in which the higher the indexes are, the higher the position of that country on that factor?

A) happiness
B) equality
C) security
D) functional citizens
Question
What view states that an individual can become happy through the accumulation of material wealth?

A) progressive view
B) comparison view
C) expectation view
D) materialistic view
Question
What view states that an individual can become happy if basic needs are secured?

A) comparison view
B) situational view
C) progressive view
D) spiritual view
Question
Denmark, Finland, and other Scandinavian countries have high scores of happiness because of adopting which view of happiness?

A) progressive view
B) comparison view
C) materialist view
D) expectation view
Question
What view states that happiness is gauged by an individual's lifetime experience of tragedies, celebrations, relations, and opportunities?

A) expectation view
B) situational view
C) biological view
D) spiritual view
Question
The phrase "I wish you did not have it" reflects which view about happiness?

A) expectation view
B) materialist view
C) comparison view
D) progressive view
Question
Philip feels like he has accomplished what he had set out for himself to do 2 years ago. Now, he is ready to set up another list of goals for himself for the next 2 years. Philip is using which view of happiness?

A) comparison view
B) progressive view
C) situational view
D) expectation view
Question
Which view states that unhappiness is due to one's genetic makeup?

A) expectation view
B) biological view
C) spiritual view
D) progressive view
Question
What is the first point of the humanistic argument about happiness?

A) Happiness starts with one's level of self-esteem.
B) Happiness is based on feedback one receives from others.
C) Happiness is achievable and can be learned.
D) Happiness can be achieved through self-growth.
Question
What is the second point of the humanistic argument about happiness?

A) Happiness depends on one's social and interpersonal engagement.
B) Happiness is achievable and can be learned.
C) Happiness can be achieved through self-growth.
D) Happiness is the propensity to experience an emotional state.
Question
What is the third point of the humanistic argument about happiness?

A) Happiness can be achieved through self-growth.
B) Happiness is receiving positive assessments from others which in turn encourages optimism and joy.
C) Happiness can be achieved through self-growth
D) Happiness is related to one's level of self-esteem.
Question
A practical step for the comparison view of happiness is

A) pursue material values and money.
B) life outcomes are basically out of our hands.
C) make sure that comparisons to others are favorable or avoid comparisons with other people.
D) think critically and provide positive feedback.
Question
A practical step for the materialist view of happiness is

A) make sure there is social support and social services.
B) make sure expectations have been met or ignore such expectations.
C) if one believes one is born unhappy, they should adjust and work on themselves.
D) pursue material values and money and status.
Question
Humanistic psychology's record on research is

A) relatively poor.
B) prolific.
C) very quantitative.
D) too theoretical.
Question
The concept of "happiness" is problematic in the research in humanistic psychology because

A) its definition is too broad.
B) it has too many multiple meanings.
C) the concept is not necessarily scientific.
D) it is an unfalsifiable statement.
Question
What kind of therapy shows their clients genuineness, empathy, and unconditional positive regard?

A) existential therapy
B) client-centered therapy
C) psychoanalysis
D) cognitive behavioral therapy
Question
Client-centered therapy used to have the original name of

A) Rogerian therapy.
B) qualitative therapy.
C) nondirective therapy.
D) gestalt therapy.
Question
Humanism is the study of phenomena that distinguishes human beings such as love, happiness, and self-growth.
Question
Humanism has deep roots in several academic disciplines.
Question
Humanism represented the "first force" in psychology.
Question
Humanistic psychology emerged in the 1950s.
Question
Humanistic psychology is generally pessimistic.
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Deck 9: The Humanistic Tradition
1
What was one of the global developments that contributed to the development of the humanistic perspective in personality psychology?

A) World War II
B) Vietnam War
C) Industrial Revolution
D) World War I
World War II
2
Early humanistic psychologists believed that

A) psychology had to stick to using experimental methods of investigation.
B) psychology must change its focus and embrace something more human.
C) psychology has to investigate the processes involved in conditioning principles.
D) psychology should not explain moral issues.
psychology must change its focus and embrace something more human.
3
What was the role of humanistic psychology in the human suffering found in society?

A) Humanism has no role in understanding human suffering.
B) Humanism must use its scientific wisdom to address societal problems.
C) Humanism should not try to understand a whole human being.
D) Humanism should explain societal suffering.
Humanism must use its scientific wisdom to address societal problems.
4
What is the study of phenomena that distinguishes human beings such as love, happiness, and self-growth?

A) psychoanalysis
B) behaviorism
C) humanism
D) trait
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
What personality tradition ignored consciousness and the world of the striving individual?

A) gestalt
B) trait
C) cognitive
D) behaviorism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Which personality tradition promotes the idea that learning was a key influence in shaping the individual's actions?

A) psychoanalytic
B) humanism
C) behaviorism
D) gestalt
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Which personality tradition ignored the individuals' subjective experience?

A) psychoanalytic
B) humanism
C) behaviorism
D) trait
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Which personality tradition focused primarily on psychological anomalies?

A) psychoanalysis
B) behaviorism
C) humanism
D) trait
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Which personality perspective devalued the meaning of conscious purposeful acts?

A) existentialism
B) humanism
C) psychoanalysis
D) situationist
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
The importance of individual responsibility, free choice, and intellectual freedom are fundamental forces guiding a person through life. This statement represents which tradition in personality psychology?

A) humanism
B) positive psychology
C) existential psychology
D) psychoanalysis
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
What is the value orientation in psychology that holds a hopeful and constructive view of people and of their substantial capacity to be self-determining?

A) existential psychology
B) humanistic psychology
C) gestalt psychology
D) cognitive psychology
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
What is the holistic perspective?

A) Individuals are uniquely human.
B) Individuals are rational.
C) Individuals are aware of their existence.
D) An individual is more than the sum of his or her habits, reflexes, mental operations or decisions.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
The holistic perspective in humanistic psychology is a criticism of which tradition in personality psychology?

A) psychoanalysis
B) cognitive
C) post-Freudian
D) behaviorism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
To say that individuals are aware of their own existence means that they

A) have consciousness.
B) are unique beings.
C) are rational.
D) do not have unconsciousness.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
What is "cosmic ecology"?

A) the individual's potential
B) the individual's general perspective on the world
C) the individual's inner world
D) the outcome for actualization
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
According to humanistic psychologists, individuals are rational and knowledgeable. Thus, it would reason that individuals

A) are sensitive and caring.
B) are objective.
C) tend to be logical.
D) can exercise choices.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
A principle in humanistic psychology is that when an individual makes mistakes,

A) the individual is doomed to repeat the mistake.
B) the individual can either be rewarded or punished for it.
C) the individual learns from the mistake and is accountable.
D) the individual represses memories of it.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Another principle of humanistic psychology is that by being aware of their goals,

A) individuals can fail to achieve them.
B) individuals can seek meaning, value, and creativity in their lives.
C) individuals do not have much freedom to do anything about them.
D) individuals must be prepared for the potential to fail.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Humanistic psychology uses primarily what type of research methodology?

A) quantitative methods
B) qualitative methods
C) mixed methods
D) randomized designs
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
What is the view humanistic psychology takes about the methodology of experiments?

A) Experiments do not allow in-depth study of one's self and so it should not be used.
B) Experiments tap into an unrelated set of behaviors.
C) Experiments take too long to run.
D) The use of experiments should be combined with nonexperimental methods.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
What is the intellectual tradition that focuses on an individual's uniqueness, free will, and responsibility?

A) behaviorism
B) psychoanalysis
C) gestalt
D) existentialism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
What is the central proposition of existentialism?

A) That individuals create their own meaning, roles, prescriptions, and values but do not necessarily fit well into these meanings.
B) That human beings are unfamiliar with using free will to their own advantage and therefore make mistakes.
C) That individuals need self-awareness to identify their free will and thus use it for achieving their potential.
D) That individuals are ignorant of free will and when they do have no guidance on how to use it to reach their potential.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
What does existentialism say about our existence?

A) It is optimistic.
B) It is filled with potential.
C) It is tragic and sad.
D) It is stressful.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Existentialism asserts there is no meaning in life and attempts on people's part to find meaning is absurd. This position is called

A) deficit needs.
B) B values.
C) existential depression.
D) existential crisis.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
What are the results of finding no meaning in life according to existentialism?

A) death and destruction
B) chaos and confusion
C) anxiety and depression
D) pluralistic ignorance
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
According to existentialism, work and making more money are

A) efforts to make life meaningful.
B) futile attempts to find meaning in life.
C) illusions of happiness.
D) the road to fulfilling one's potential.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Joe believes working is the only meaning in life. He works hard, gets promoted, and earns a lot of money. Yet he is extremely dissatisfied with his life and feels very alone. According to existentialism, Joe has reached

A) a state of despair.
B) an existential crisis.
C) the meaning of life.
D) the illusion about life.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
According to existentialism, depression will lead to

A) fatigue.
B) ignorance and stupidity.
C) despair.
D) psychosis.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Existential psychology focuses on

A) an individuals' experience as being unique, exceptional, and unrepeatable.
B) there is no possibility for individuals to improve themselves.
C) there is potential in only a few individuals depending on amount of self-insight.
D) the road to happiness as relatively easy.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
What does existential psychology believe about an individual's free will?

A) There is no free will in individuals; there's only the illusion that they have it.
B) Free will only become apparent when individuals achieve self-insight.
C) Individuals have free will and make choices and take responsibility for them.
D) Using one's free will lead to the path of happiness.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Unlike existential philosophers, existential psychology is

A) exciting.
B) dull.
C) optimistic.
D) selective.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
According to existential psychology, self-improvement can be achieved through

A) work and play.
B) commitments in relationships.
C) changes in self-awareness.
D) therapy.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
According to existential psychology, self-consciousness leads to

A) happiness.
B) the meaning of life.
C) coping skills.
D) moral values.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
Rollo May asserted that anxiety is provoked by

A) lack of relationships.
B) lack of self-awareness.
C) fundamental technological and social changes.
D) ignorance.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
According to Rollo May, what is another source of anxiety?

A) lack of relationships
B) isolation
C) work and work expectations
D) threats to an individual's most fundamental family values
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
According to Rollo May, what is one way to reduce anxiety?

A) take a vacation
B) meditate
C) rediscover the importance of caring for one another
D) pursue one's own goals
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
According to Rollo May, what's the difference between anxiety and fear?

A) Nothing, they are both the same.
B) Fear is more manageable than anxiety because fear has an unidentifiable source.
C) The difference is in the magnitude of the effect they bring about for the individual.
D) Fear makes one powerless while anxiety makes one confused.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
Which of the following is not a way to handle fear as stated by Rollo May?

A) accept it
B) avoid it
C) confront it
D) deny it exist
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
According to Maslow, what is a force within an organism that initiates and maintains behavior?

A) fear and anxiety
B) motivation
C) drive
D) growth
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
Maslow described individuals' needs in a

A) circle.
B) flowchart.
C) hierarchy.
D) pie chart.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
Maslow's needs are grouped according to

A) potency.
B) relevance to one's values.
C) the current demands in society.
D) level of spirituality.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
How many needs are there in Maslow's theory?

A) 6
B) 3
C) 9
D) 5
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
What are the Maslow's needs according to potency?

A) love, belongingness, physiological, esteem, safety
B) physiological, esteem, self-actualization, safety
C) physiological, safety, love, esteem, self-actualization
D) safety, esteem, love, physiological, self-actualization
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44
According to Maslow, once an individual has satisfied the cluster of needs at a particular level,

A) He or she can jump to any of the levels above it.
B) He or she will progress to the next level.
C) He or she can skip to the top.
D) He or she will not need to go back to that level again.
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45
Francisco is being recognized for his charitable work with the poor. Francisco has reached what level of Maslow's hierarchy of needs?

A) love
B) safety
C) self-actualization
D) esteem
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46
Meg wants to make sure she had locked the front door of her apartment this morning before she went to work. Meg is at what level of Maslow's hierarchy of needs?

A) love
B) esteem
C) safety
D) physiological
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47
The first four levels of Maslow's hierarchy of needs are called

A) growth needs.
B) fixed needs.
C) deficit needs.
D) urgent needs.
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48
What are rooted in the scarcity of something like food or esteem from others?

A) B-needs
B) D-needs.
C) D-needs
D) B-values .
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49
What is the highest stage of individual development and is governed by the search for truth, goodness, beauty, wholeness, justice, and meaningfulness?

A) self-actualization
B) happiness
C) optimism
D) the good life
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50
Which of the following below is not a characteristic of a self-actualized individual according to Maslow?

A) spontaneity and simplicity
B) need for privacy
C) deep interpersonal relations
D) authoritarian traits
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51
Maslow's research drew some criticism. Which of the following below was one of them?

A) Maslow's examples of self-actualized individuals were based on his own moral code.
B) Actualization is applicable to everyone else in the global arena.
C) There are three additional needs above actualization.
D) The needs are prioritized correctly.
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Unlock Deck
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52
What is the state of complete concentration and joyful immersion in a situation or activity?

A) peak experiences
B) ecstasy
C) flow
D) actualization
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53
Who proposed that most of the behaviors that people learn are consistent with the subjective concept of the self?

A) Rollo May
B) Abraham Maslow
C) Carl Rogers
D) M. Csikzentmihalyi
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54
According to Rogers, people strive to make the best of their existence and value the high self-esteem and positive emotions toward the self called

A) positive self-regard.
B) self-esteem.
C) flow.
D) congruent self.
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55
According to Rogers, when do individuals experience incongruity?

A) When individuals behave according to their set of morals.
B) When individuals cannot make or maintain the high standards society sets up for individual behavior.
C) When individuals put their needs and devotion above everyone else's.
D) When individuals put themselves second to the community.
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56
Who are fully functioning individuals?

A) They put their needs before the needs of the community.
B) They put the community's needs before their own.
C) They value expression instead of conformity.
D) They are well balanced, well adjusted, and interested in learning and knowing.
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57
Humanistic psychology contributed to the tradition that studies the strengths and virtues that enable individuals and communities to thrive. What is this tradition called?

A) Maslow's psychology
B) positive psychology
C) client-centered psychology
D) gestalt psychology
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58
What contributed to the concept of positive mental health?

A) psychoanalysis
B) humanistic psychology
C) existential psychology
D) Maslow's hierarchy of needs
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59
What has become an important measure of social and economic development of a country in which the higher the indexes are, the higher the position of that country on that factor?

A) happiness
B) equality
C) security
D) functional citizens
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60
What view states that an individual can become happy through the accumulation of material wealth?

A) progressive view
B) comparison view
C) expectation view
D) materialistic view
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61
What view states that an individual can become happy if basic needs are secured?

A) comparison view
B) situational view
C) progressive view
D) spiritual view
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62
Denmark, Finland, and other Scandinavian countries have high scores of happiness because of adopting which view of happiness?

A) progressive view
B) comparison view
C) materialist view
D) expectation view
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63
What view states that happiness is gauged by an individual's lifetime experience of tragedies, celebrations, relations, and opportunities?

A) expectation view
B) situational view
C) biological view
D) spiritual view
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64
The phrase "I wish you did not have it" reflects which view about happiness?

A) expectation view
B) materialist view
C) comparison view
D) progressive view
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65
Philip feels like he has accomplished what he had set out for himself to do 2 years ago. Now, he is ready to set up another list of goals for himself for the next 2 years. Philip is using which view of happiness?

A) comparison view
B) progressive view
C) situational view
D) expectation view
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66
Which view states that unhappiness is due to one's genetic makeup?

A) expectation view
B) biological view
C) spiritual view
D) progressive view
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67
What is the first point of the humanistic argument about happiness?

A) Happiness starts with one's level of self-esteem.
B) Happiness is based on feedback one receives from others.
C) Happiness is achievable and can be learned.
D) Happiness can be achieved through self-growth.
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Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
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68
What is the second point of the humanistic argument about happiness?

A) Happiness depends on one's social and interpersonal engagement.
B) Happiness is achievable and can be learned.
C) Happiness can be achieved through self-growth.
D) Happiness is the propensity to experience an emotional state.
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Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
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69
What is the third point of the humanistic argument about happiness?

A) Happiness can be achieved through self-growth.
B) Happiness is receiving positive assessments from others which in turn encourages optimism and joy.
C) Happiness can be achieved through self-growth
D) Happiness is related to one's level of self-esteem.
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70
A practical step for the comparison view of happiness is

A) pursue material values and money.
B) life outcomes are basically out of our hands.
C) make sure that comparisons to others are favorable or avoid comparisons with other people.
D) think critically and provide positive feedback.
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71
A practical step for the materialist view of happiness is

A) make sure there is social support and social services.
B) make sure expectations have been met or ignore such expectations.
C) if one believes one is born unhappy, they should adjust and work on themselves.
D) pursue material values and money and status.
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72
Humanistic psychology's record on research is

A) relatively poor.
B) prolific.
C) very quantitative.
D) too theoretical.
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73
The concept of "happiness" is problematic in the research in humanistic psychology because

A) its definition is too broad.
B) it has too many multiple meanings.
C) the concept is not necessarily scientific.
D) it is an unfalsifiable statement.
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74
What kind of therapy shows their clients genuineness, empathy, and unconditional positive regard?

A) existential therapy
B) client-centered therapy
C) psychoanalysis
D) cognitive behavioral therapy
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75
Client-centered therapy used to have the original name of

A) Rogerian therapy.
B) qualitative therapy.
C) nondirective therapy.
D) gestalt therapy.
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76
Humanism is the study of phenomena that distinguishes human beings such as love, happiness, and self-growth.
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77
Humanism has deep roots in several academic disciplines.
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78
Humanism represented the "first force" in psychology.
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79
Humanistic psychology emerged in the 1950s.
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80
Humanistic psychology is generally pessimistic.
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