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1 |  |  Rogers wanted to be a after he graduated from the University of Wisconsin, but he switched to psychology when he went to Columbia University. |
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2 |  |  Rogers's system of therapy is called , and his theory of personality can be called person-centered. |
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3 |  |  The tendency suggests that all matter tends to evolve from simpler to more complex forms. |
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4 |  |  The tendency suggests that people tend to move toward completion or fulfillment of potentials. |
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5 |  |  A state of exists when the organismic self, the perceived self, and the ideal self are in harmony. |
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6 |  |  To Rogers, the real self and the self are the same concept. |
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7 |  |  Rogers believed that each of us has an self, that is, a picture of our self as we would wish to be. |
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8 |  |  Discrepancies between the and the organismic self results in incongruence. |
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9 |  |  A discrepancy between self-concept and organismic experiences is called . |
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10 |  |  People often deny or both positive and negative experiences because these experiences threaten an established self-concept. |
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11 |  |  All of us, Rogers said, have a need for , that is, a feeling of self-confidence and self-worth |
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12 |  |  We experience of worth whenever a significant other accepts only our positive behaviors and traits. |
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13 |  |  The need for would include the need for food, sleep, and the tendency to resist change. |
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14 |  |  The need for includes the need to grow, to develop, and to become a more fully-functioning person. |
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15 |  |  The first condition for therapeutic growth is that a client comes into contact with a congruent therapist. |
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16 |  |  A person is one whose organismic experiences are matched by an awareness of them and a willingness to honestly communicate them. |
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17 |  |  Unconditional exists when the therapist prizes the client regardless of the client's behavior. |
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18 |  |  A state of exists when therapists accurately sense the feeling of their clients and are able to communicate these perception so that the clients know that another person is on their wave length. |
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19 |  |  According to Rogers, living is the tendency to live in the moment. |
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20 |  |  The issues of freedom and control of human behavior was at the heart of a series of debates between Rogers and . |
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