They Changed the World with Psychology

1

Carl Rogers

The face of humanistic psychology

It was a time when no one was "Rogers"

Carl Ransom Rogers (January 8, 1902 - February 4, 1987) was an American psychologist and one of the leading exponents of humanistic psychology. Carl Ransom Rogers (January 8, 1902 - February 4, 1987) was an American psychologist and one of the leading exponents of humanistic psychology. He was engaged in the practice and research of psychological counseling and therapy, advocating a "client-centered" approach to psychotherapy, pioneering non-directive therapy (case-centered therapy), and emphasizing the ability of people to make self-adjustments in order to restore their mental health.

Rogers put forward the "human-centered therapy" represents the main trend of humanistic psychotherapy. That is to say, if visitors are provided with an optimal psychological environment or atmosphere, they will do their best to maximize their self-understanding, change their perceptions of themselves and others, produce self-directed behaviors, and ultimately reach a level of psychological well-being.

Rogers saw his view of therapy as a philosophy of life, not as a treatment of "perversion," and therefore the therapy and counseling of "person-centered therapy" required a good doctor-patient relationship. He believes that the key to therapy is not the technique, but the attitude of the therapist, the creation of an atmosphere and the establishment of a therapeutic relationship. The therapist is not an expert and does not know their own problems better than the visitor. At the same time, he outlines a 12-step therapeutic process, during which he emphasizes the information and emotional communication between the visitor and the therapist, and the need for both to maximize their subjective initiative in the therapeutic process.

With a foreword by Irving Aron: "Those who know Rogers well know that his therapy is both profound and flexible."

Title:On Human Growth

Author: [US] Carl Rogers

This is the first book on the subject of human growth.

Author: [US] Carl Rogers

Publisher: World Book Publishing Company

Translator: Shi Menglei, etc.

Publication Year: 2015.01

Price: 68.00 RMB

Series: "Shitu Psychology" Masters of the Rainbow Book Series

2

Salvador Minuchin

The originator of structural family therapy

Salvador Minuchin was a Jew born in Argentina. Originally a pediatrician, he became a child psychiatrist after training under the leadership of Ackeman, who went to Israel in 1952 to help children displaced by the Holocaust and Jews immigrating from Arab countries. Two years later, Minuchin returned to the U.S. to train in psychoanalysis and work as a counselor at a school for delinquent children outside New York City. He found that most of these children came from broken and impoverished families, and he and his colleagues began trying to develop a particular set of theories and techniques to use in helping these children. They found a treatment that changed the family vein rather than targeting the delinquent's individual personality or behavioral problems, and they were successful.

Mignoukhin wanted to test his techniques on a wider range of families at different levels, including working-class and middle-class families. As a result, he joined the Philadelphia Child Guidance Center in 1965, where he served as its director. Under Minuchin's bold and imaginative leadership, the counseling center grew to unprecedented proportions. In his 1974 book, Family and Family Theraoy, Minuchin elaborated on the structuralist concepts of family therapy that he had synthesized from his extensive practice and research.

Minookin then turned his attention to the role of the family chakra in physical and mental disorders, such as certain diabetes mellitus, recurrent severe asthma, and anorexia nervosa. In Minookin's view, children with these disorders had families with structural problems that sustained the disorders, and in 1978, Minookin published a book on the subject, Psychosomatic Families. Currently, Structural Family Therapy is one of the most popular and effective ways of dealing with anorexia nervosa in Western countries.

The groundbreaking work of family therapists Minou Keng and Li Weiyong

Book title: Mastering Family Therapy

Publisher: World Book Publishing Company

The first book to be published in the United States. World Book Publishing Corporation

Subtitle:? The Road to Family Growth and Transformation

Translated by:? Gao Jun

Publication date: ?2010.01

Price: ?39.00 yuan

Series: ? Recommended by the Chinese Psychological Association

3

Aaron Beck

Founder of the Cognitive School

The theoretical basis of cognitive therapy is the cognitive theory of emotional disorders proposed by Aaron Beck. He argued that psychological problems "do not always arise from mysterious, irresistible forces; rather, they can arise from ordinary events, such as faulty learning, faulty inferences based on partial or incorrect information, and things like an inability to properly distinguish the difference between the real and the ideal." He suggests that each person's emotions and behaviors are largely determined by his or her own way or approach to understanding the world and dealing with it, that is, a person's mind determines his or her inner experiences and reactions.

Cognitive therapy is a general term for a class of psychotherapeutic approaches to change a patient's maladaptive cognition through cognitive and behavioral techniques, based on the theoretical assumption that cognitive processes influence emotion and behavior. By cognition is generally meant cognitive activity or cognitive processes, including beliefs and belief systems, thinking and imagination. Cognitive processes generally consist of three parts: (1) the process of receiving and evaluating information; (2) the process of generating ways of coping and dealing with problems; and (3) the process of predicting and estimating outcomes.

4

Irvin Yalom

Existential therapy and group therapy

Irvin Yalom, a tenured professor emeritus of psychiatry at Stanford University, and an authority on group psychotherapy in the U.S. Along with Viktor Frank and Rollo May, Irvin Yalom is one of the He is one of the three major representatives of existential therapy, and is the only remaining international psychiatrist in the world.

Aron also specialized in writing psychotherapeutic novels and stories, such as "Lies on the Diagnostic Chair", "When Nietzsche Cried", "The Meaning of Life", "The Love Executioner", "Schopenhauer's Cure", etc., which have won many awards for European and American novels and non-fiction literature.

His tapes are widely used in the training of therapists, and he continues to speak throughout the U.S. and in clinical therapy. He was the recipient of the 1974 Edward Stryker Award for his contributions to the field of clinical psychiatry, and in 1979 he received the American Psychiatric Association's Foundation Award for Scholarly Research. Irving Aron's Existentialist Philosophy Irving Aron believed that human beings are free and responsible for their own choices and actions. Existentialism is a highly philosophical school of thought that explores themes such as the capacity for self-awareness, freedom and responsibility, the pursuit of self-identity and interpersonal relationships, the search for meaning, anxiety as a state of being, and the awareness of death and non-existence with clients in the therapeutic process.

In 1980, Aron published his most scholarly article, Existential Spiritual Healing. In this article, he defined the four ultimate problems of life, namely: the inevitability of death; my deep sense of loneliness; our need for freedom; and the point that perhaps there is no obvious meaning to life. He believes that all the pain in our lives basically stems from these 4 areas of distress.

The psychotherapist's handbook that influenced Irving Aron, a psychoanalytic tale comparable to a suspense novel

Title: Kafka's Delusions

Author:? Robert Kafka's Delusions

Author. Robert Lindahl

Published by:? World Book Publishing Corporation

Translated by:? Wu Ug

Publication date: ?2015.066

Price: ?38.00

5

Albert Ellis

Founder of Rational Emotive Bodywork Therapy (R.E.B.T)

Albert Ellis. September 27, 1913 - July 24, 2007) was an American clinical psychologist who developed Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy (R.E.B.T.) in 1955 and was a pioneer of the sexual liberation movement in the United States in the 1960s. Many consider him the originator of cognitive-behavioral therapy.

Ellis espoused the philosophical views of phenomenalist, pragmatist, and humanistic philosophies, which he combined with behaviorism to formulate the rational-emotive behavior therapy rationale. The rationale is that people suffer from psychological disorders because of those irrational thoughts. Therefore, if the patient is made to recognize those irrational thoughts and to convert them into rational thoughts, effective treatment results can be achieved.

Rational Behavior Therapy (RBT) was developed from the rational therapy created by Ellis in 1955. Initially, the name he used was Rational Therapy (RT), and in 1961 it was changed to Rational Emotive Therapy (RET), until 1993 when Ellis changed RET to Rational Emotive Behavioral Therapy. He believed that RET would mislead people into thinking that the therapy did not focus on behavioral concepts, but in fact Ellis emphasized the correlation between cognition, behavior, and emotion when he first created the therapy, and the process and techniques used in the therapy included cognition, behavior, and emotion. He has published many creative and popular treatises, especially in the 1960s, and several of his books (e.g., Sexual Innocence, etc.) have sold millions of copies, thus popularizing his rational-emotional therapy. Ellis was energetic and prolific, and one of the most prolific authors to have written in the field of counseling and therapy. In his busy professional career, he meets with eighty individual therapy sessions per week, directs five therapy groups, and gives two hundred lectures and seminars per year to professionals and the general public. He has published more than fifty books and more than seven hundred articles, most of which focus on the theory and application of Emotive Behavior Therapy.

6

Murray Bowen

The founder of systemic family theory

Murray Bowen, a pioneer of family therapy. At the center of the theory: personal independence, the ability of the individual to maintain himself in the face of group influences, especially the stresses of family life.

7

Carl Gustav Jung

Founder of analytical psychology

Carl Gustav Jung (July 26, 1875 - June 6, 1961) also known as Jung. Swiss psychologist, psychiatrist, the main representative of psychoanalysis. His major works include Psychology of the Unconscious, Psychological Types, Archetypes of the Collective Unconscious, and Psychology and Literature. The theory of "collective unconscious" and "archetype" is a corrective to the generalization tendency of Freudian psychoanalysis.

Jung was a lecturer in psychiatry at the University of Zurich in 1905, and later resigned to open his own practice. Jung was interested in Freud's 1900 publication "The Interpretation of Dreams", with which he corresponded, participated in Freud's psychoanalytic movement, *** with the founding of an international psychoanalytic society, and served as the first hole president, and later because of the two men's doctrines to produce differences and break up. He was a professor at the Federal University of Technology and his alma mater, the University of Basel, and was awarded honorary doctorates by the University of Oxford and Harvard University.

Jung was depressed for several years after his break with Freud. He had visions and sensations of ghosts gathering in his home. One of the visions was of a winged and lame old man, Philemon, and the other was of a beautiful lady. These two became samples of his later old wise man (Self) and Anima.

Jung was a scholar who studied both East and West and was highly regarded in the world of psychology. It is one of the originators of psychology.

Jung's masterpieces in his later years

Title:The Ego and Selfhood

Author:? [Switzerland] C.G. Jung

Publisher:? World Book Publishing Corporation

Translator: Zhao Xiang

Publication date:?2014.01

Series:? "The Rainbow Series of Masters

Unraveling the Fog of Spiritual Awakening and Spiritual Traps Uncovering Jung's Feud with the New Age

Title: Jung and the New Age

Author: [AU] David David Jung

Published:?2014.01

Translated by Zhao Xiang

Publication date:?2014.01

Series:? [David Dacey

Book title: "Jung and the New Age"

Author: ? Dacey

Publisher:? World Book Publishing Corporation

Translated by:? Gong Yilei

Publication date:?2015.02

Series:? Shitu Psychology "Iceberg Series"

Explore the origin of the unconscious mind, and reveal the encounter and collision of two great minds

Book title: Freud and Jung

Author:? [Henry? Ehrenberg

Publisher:? World Book Publishing Corporation

Translated by:? Liu Shukai /Mr. Liu Shukai Wu Jiaxuan Publication date: 2015.02

Series:? Shitu Psychology "Iceberg Series"

The only Chinese translation of Jung's theory of empathy, a wise work that profoundly explains the nature of the relationship

Title:The Psychology of Empathy

Author:? [C.G. Jung

Published by:? World Book Publishing Corporation

Translated by:? Mei Shengjie

Publication date:?2014.08

Series:? "The Rainbow Series of Masters

Bridging Eastern and Western philosophical and spiritual traditions, unveiling the hidden connection between Jung and Tibetan Buddhism

Title: Jung's Psychology and Tibetan Buddhism

Author:? [American] Radmila Moakanin

Publisher:? World Book Publishing Corporation

Translated by:? Blue Lotus

Publication date:?2015.05

Series:? Seito psychological "iceberg series"

8

Milton Erickson (Milton Erickson)

Master of hypnosis

Milton. Dr. Milton Hyland Erickson (December 5, 1901 - March 25, 1980) has been described as the "Father of Modern Hypnosis" and was a leading authority on medical hypnosis, family therapy, and Brief Strategic Psychotherapy (BSP). He was a leading authority on medical hypnosis, family therapy, and Brief Strategic Psychotherapy.

His research and practical achievements in subliminal manipulation are groundbreaking, and he has been called the world's greatest communicator to date. Psychologists have called him the chief psychotherapist of the twentieth century, and many believe that while Freud's contribution to psychotherapy lies in theory, Erikson's contribution lies in the practice of therapy, and that the therapeutic methods he developed have been widely used around the globe and are recognized as having had a significant impact on many highly effective psychotherapeutic treatments, including short-term strategic psychotherapy, family systems therapy, strategic family therapy, program-focused therapy (SFT), and family therapy. These include: Short Term Strategic Psychotherapy (STP), Family Systems Therapy (FST), Strategic Family Therapy (SFT), Solution Focused Therapy (SFBT), and Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP).

Erickson is the father of modern medical hypnosis and has been instrumental in the development of new hypnotic induction modalities and applications. He is the *** co-author of five books on hypnosis and has published over one hundred and thirty articles in the professional literature, most of them on hypnotherapy. He was the founder and first president of the American Society of Clinical Hypnosis and the editor of its official journal, the American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis, for ten years. He traveled extensively teaching hypnosis to professionals, especially in the United States, where he was known as "Mr. Hypnosis". Erickson legitimized hypnosis, making it less of a "clown in the halls of serious academia".

Erickson is a world-renowned genius hypnotist, who has made hypnosis legal, so that hypnosis is no longer a "serious academic hall of clowns"; he is a world-renowned master of the great medical hypnosis, often due to the miraculous healing of patients who are considered to be " hopeless". He was known worldwide as a great master of medical hypnosis, often famous for miraculously curing patients who were thought to be "hopeless", and thus he was considered an outstanding innovator, a hypnosis leader who completely overturned the tradition and injected new elements into hypnosis and psychotherapy; he was the father of modern medical hypnosis, and he had extraordinary creativity in the development of new hypnotic induction modalities and applications. Although he died 32 years ago, no one has surpassed him in the field of hypnosis.

Books on the Therapeutic Uses of Hypnosis

Title: Erickson's Theory of Hypnotherapy

Author:? Stephen Gilligan

Publisher:? World Book Publishing Corporation

Publication date:?2007.10

Pricing:?36.00 yuan

Series:? Chinese Psychological Association Recommended Books

9

John Gottman

Relationship Master

Marriage Therapy Expert

John Gottman, the world-renowned "Pope of Marriage", Professor of Psychology at the University of Washington, Professor of Relationship Therapy at the University of Washington, Seattle, USA. John Gottman, professor of psychology at the University of Washington and director of the Seattle Institute of Human Relations, has been engaged in research on family relationships for 40 years, and is an expert in the field of marital and interpersonal relationships, and has been hailed by the media as the "Pope of Marriage".

He is an outstanding psychologist in the field of interpersonal relationships, and has been honored four times with the Scientific Investigator's Medal of the American Institute of Mental Health, and has been awarded the Distinguished Scientific Investigator's Medal of the American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy, the Distinguished Contributions Award of the American Academy of Family Therapy, and the President's Medal of the American Psychological Association's Division of Family Psychology.

10

Virginia Satir

Founder of Satirian Family Therapy

One of the most influential family therapists in the United States

The only woman among the 10 highest rated psychotherapists in the Western world

Virginia Satir (1916-1988) was a world-renowned psychotherapist. 1988) was a world-renowned psychotherapist and family therapist of the first generation, and has been a leader since the 1950s.

She was one of the most influential and leading family therapists in the United States, and was hailed by Human Behavior as "everyone's master family therapist".

She has devoted her life to exploring issues of interpersonal and human nature, and her philosophy and approach to family communication are highly respected and valued by career professionals.

She is a first-generation family therapist who has been a leader since the 1950s, and has been regarded as a pioneer of family therapy (Goldenberg, 1985), and has even been called the "Columbus of family therapy" (McLendon, 1999), which means that she is the originator of family therapy. She is also known as the "Columbus of Family Therapy" (McLendon, 1999), meaning that family therapy was pioneered by her, which is an indication of her significant contributions in this area, and because of her achievements, her two alma maters, the University of Wisconsin and the University of Chicago, have awarded her an honorary doctorate degree and the Gold Medal for Outstanding Contributions to Mankind, respectively.

Satya is revered by her peers for her theory, which is different from traditional therapies, and for her y personal approach to practice. From her position as president of the American Psychological Association of Human Centeredness, we can tell that she is an extreme humanist, and that everything is human-centered and human-centered. She believes that true humanism emphasizes "you and me" rather than "you or I", and cares about "us" rather than "me". The concern is for "we", not "I", otherwise it would be self-serving. Each person is unique, can never be duplicated, and should be lived on his or her own terms. What Satya did is just to remind people to respect life, believe that life can be changed, and hope that everyone can survive in the world in a better way.

Her books published domestically include The Actual Book of Satya Therapy, Satya Family Therapy Model, and How New Families Shape People.

Bestselling Satya Family Therapy Classics by John Behmen Cai Minli Jointly Recommended

Title: How New Families Shape People

Author: Virginia Satya

Publisher: World Book Publishing Co.

Pricing: 49.00 RMB

Bestselling Satya Family Therapy Classics by John Behmen Cai Minli Jointly Recommended

Bestselling Satya Family Therapy Classics by John Behmen Cai Minli Jointly Recommended

The book is published in the Chinese language. Recommended

Title: Satya Family Therapy Model

Author: Virginia Satya

Publisher: World Book Publishing Co.

Price: 49.00 yuan

Best-selling Satya Family Therapy Classics by John Behmen and Cai Minli Jointly Recommended

Title: Satya Therapy Facts

Book: Satya Therapy Facts

Author: Virginia Satya

Price: 49.00 yuan

Best-selling Satya Family Therapy Classics by John Behmen and Cai Minli Jointly Recommended

Book: Satya Therapy Facts

Book: Satya Therapy Facts

Author:Virginia Satya

Publisher:World Book Publishing Corporation

Pricing:112.00 RMB

A Collection of Virginia Satya's Speeches

Book Title:When I Meet a Person

Author:? [American] Virginia Satya? [Canada] John Behrman

Publisher:? World Book Publishing Company Beijing

Publication date:?2016.07

Price:?49.00