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  1. link.springer.com › referenceworkentry › 10Genuineness - SpringerLink

    Apr 4, 2017 · It is essential to recognize that Carl R. Rogers was the major personality theorist who first proposed the importance of the concept of genuineness. In a paper given at the Menninger Clinic and the Topeka Veteran’s Hospital in 1946, he alluded to the concept of genuineness as a characteristic of “client-centeredness.”.

    • danshaw@nova.edu
  2. Percep-tual psychology is one of the key psychological theories un-derlying Invitational Theory and relies on the concept that attitudes and beliefs determine behavior. Art Combs (1990) the progenitor of Perceptual Psychology addressed the con-cept of genuineness and refers to it as authenticity.

  3. Jul 20, 2023 · Yet, the study of the authentic, good life goes much further back than the beginning of humanistic psychology. It’s again Greek philosopher Aristotle who proposed the concept of the good life in his essay Nicomachean Ethics in the fourth century BC.

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  4. Mar 1, 2011 · Congruence or genuineness is a relational quality that has been highly prized throughout the history of psychotherapy, but of diminished research interest in recent years. In this article, we ...

  5. Congruence or genuineness is a relational quality first described and emphasized by Carl Rogers (1957). Research interest in this concept has waxed and waned over the years; however, in the past decade genuineness has begun to re-emerge as an important construct in Gelso's conceptualization of the "red relationship" and the research generated ...

  6. Jun 1, 2019 · Congruence or genuineness is a relational quality first described and emphasized by Carl Rogers (1957). Research interest in this concept has waxed and waned over the years, however,

  7. Reis and Patrick (1996) defined authentic relationships as involving a reciprocal process of self-disclosure, intimacy, and trust. Kernis and Goldman (2006) described three elements in authentic relationships: (a) openness and truthfulness, (b) letting others “see the real you,” and (c) being genuine and not “fake.”.

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