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      • In "Psychology and the Human Dilemma," Rollo May... presents his penetrating views on the conflicts involved in being a person in our modern society. Here he deals with man's loss of identity in the contemporary world, the sources of his anxiety, and the ultimate paradox of the concepts of freedom and responsibility.
      psycnet.apa.org › record › 1996/97848/000
  1. According to May (1967), the human dilemma arises out of our capacity to experience ourselves as both subject and object at the same time. But how can opposite poles of the human experience both be true?

  2. Abstract. In "Psychology and the Human Dilemma," Rollo May . . . presents his penetrating views on the conflicts involved in being a person in our modern society. Here he deals with man's loss of identity in the contemporary world, the sources of his anxiety, and the ultimate paradox of the concepts of freedom and responsibility.

    • Rollo May
    • 1979
  3. According to May (1967), the human dilemma arises out of our capacity to experience ourselves as both subject and object at the same time. But how can opposite poles of the human experience both be true?

  4. In The Human Dilemma, Mishlove talks with noted psychotherapist and popular psychology author Rollo May (Love and Will, The Meaning of Anxiety, etc.) about what May calls the "basic human dilemma": our knowledge of our own mortality.

  5. Mar 21, 2020 · Psychology and the human dilemma. Introduction: what is the human dilemma? -- Modern man's loss of significance -- Personal identity in an anonymous world -- Historical roots of modern anxiety theories -- Anxiety and values -- The context of psychotherapy -- A phenomenological approach to psychotherapy -- Existential therapy and the American ...

  6. Rollo May. W. W. Norton & Company, 1979 - Psychology - 221 pages. In "Psychology and the Human Dilemma," Rollo May, the distinguished psychoanalyst, presents his penetrating views of the...

  7. Dec 24, 2008 · Abstract. This article reviews the life and work of Rollo May and his influence on the author’s development of applying existential therapy to treating traumatic stress. An examination of May’s worldview, theory, and therapeutic philosophy is presented.

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