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This 7 page paper examines the humanistic philosophies of psychological theorist Sidney Jourard. This paper provides many examples of his theories as well as commenting upon their impact. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
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7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_GSSidJou.rtf
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as Maslow, Jourard has advanced humanism in our modern era and has provided a foundation upon which other upcoming humanists can build in the future.
Sidney Jourard was born in 1926 and died in 1974 (Sidney Jourard, 2004). He was known as a very influential humanist in the field of psychology,
and was a pioneer in the areas of self-disclosure and body awareness (Sidney Jourard, 2004). Educated at the University of Toronto, Jourard earned a degree in psychology in 1948,
and then went on to the University of Buffalo to earn his Ph.D. (Sidney Jourard, 2004). Jourard taught psychology for many years in addition to having his own practice
(Sidney Jourard, 2004). Jourard was a proponent of the social penetration theory, which essentially asserts that people are to be compared
to onions (Williams, 1998). In other words, he likened people to an onion since onions have layers, just as most people also do (Williams, 1998). And so, according
to this theory, people have multi-layered personalities and the removal of each layer exposes yet another layer, and so on (Williams, 1998). As one person gets to know another,
the layers are slowly and systematically peeled away, revealing increasingly more of the personality of the individual (Williams, 1998). According to
this theory, the outer layers are considered to be the public self while the inner layers are considered to be the private self. The public self exposes parts of
our personality that are apparent even to those who do not know us very well. This would include things such as our world view, our tastes, etc. (Williams, 1998).
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