Hi

On Fri, 8 Oct 2004, Annette Taylor, Ph. D. wrote:
> Positive psychology and what it might and might not mean
> (i.e., whether or not this is a revival of humanism, I was
> struck by one of the opening sentences that Marie posted from
> Seligman's website:

> As a group of psychologists, do we agree that "For most of
> the 20th Century, the field of psychology has focused largely
> on understanding and healing psychological ailments within a
> disease model." ?  I for one, don't think that that statement
> correctly characterizes the psychology and history of
> psychology that I've studied,,,,,,but then, I'm not a
> clinician. What have I missed?

I had a letter in the Monitor a few years ago that made this
point and several others (see below).  I thought the evidence for
this claim was weak.  Seligman responded simply with a
re-statement of the evidence that he had earlier presented (and
with which I was familiar).  The evidence was from a PsychINFO
search on negative and positive words, with the number of hits
being the dependent variable.  More hits for negative terms.  I
believed (and still do) that examination of textbooks, and other
approaches to this question would be less telling.

More disturbing to me was that APA has been accepting funds from
the John Templeton organization to make awards in positive
psychology.  Templeton has committed much money to reconciling
science and religion, including an award each year for the person
best advancing this agenda, funding for conferences and workshops
on science and religion, and like projects.  Seligman responded
that all funding sources, including NSF, have an agenda.  I'm
still astounded that anyone would compare NSF to Templeton's
organization, let alone someone of Seligman's stature.

Coming back to the original observation and Humanistic
psychology, I do believe that the Positive Psychology movement
has given new life to what appeared to be a fading (or already
faded) perspective in psychology, that is, the humanistic
perspective.  And I do not think it is for the better for
scientific psychology.

Best wishes
Jim

============================================================================
James M. Clark                          (204) 786-9757
Department of Psychology                (204) 774-4134 Fax
University of Winnipeg                  4L05D
Winnipeg, Manitoba  R3B 2E9             [EMAIL PROTECTED]
CANADA                                  http://www.uwinnipeg.ca/~clark
============================================================================


---
You are currently subscribed to tips as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to