02810cam a2200337 a 45000010008000000030008000080050017000160080041000330100017000740200026000910200023001170200026001400200023001660240016001890350024002050350057002290350017002860400062003030500021003650820019003861000031004052450166004362600046006023000034006485040064006825050795007465200856015416500017023977000018024147000040024326897975BD-DhUL20161117165447.0080303s2009 caua b 001 0 eng  a 2008009144 a9781412914222 (cloth) a1412914221 (cloth) a9781412970624 (paper) a1412970628 (paper) a99821659172 a(OCoLC)ocn213384841 a(OCoLC)213384841z(OCoLC)191924850z(OCoLC)233937539 a(NNC)6897975 aDLCcDLCdBAKERdBTCTAdYDXCPdC#PdBWXdOrLoB-BdBD-DhUL00aBF698b.E45 200900a155.2222bELP1 aEllis, Albert,d1913-2007.10aPersonality theories :bcritical perspectives /cAlbert Ellis, Mike Abrams ; with Lidia D. Abrams ; with contributions by Alexander Nussbaum and Rebecca J. Frey. aLos Angeles :bSAGE Publications,cc2009. axix, 696 p. :bill. ;c24 cm. aIncludes bibliographical references (p. 627-669) and index.00g1.tThe Study of Personality: Introduction -- g2.tHistorical Perspectives on Personality -- g3.tPersonality Research -- g4.tFreud and the Dynamic Unconscious -- g5.tPsychoanalysis in Theory and Practice -- g6.tFreud's Followers -- g7.tPsychiatric and Medical Models -- g8.tThe Neo-Freudians -- g9.tPersonality and Traits -- g10.tBehaviorist Views of Personality -- g11.tHumanistic Views of Personality -- g12.tCarl Rogers and Humanist Psychotherapy -- g13.tEarly Cognitive Views of Personality -- g14.tBiology, Genetics, and the Evolution of Personality -- g15.tAbnormal Personality and Personality Disorders -- g16.tAlbert Ellis and the Rational Emotive Behavioral Theory of Personality -- g17.tReligious, New Age, and Traditional Approaches to Personality.1 a"Personality Theories: Critical Perspectives is the groundbreaking, final text written by Albert Ellis, long considered the grandfather of cognitive behavioral therapies. The book provides students with supporting and contradictory evidence for the development of personality theories through time. Without condemning the founding theorists who came before him, Ellis builds on more than a century of psychological research to re-examine the theories of Freud, Jung, and Adler while taking an equally critical look at modern, research-based theories, including his own." "This enlightening text will provide insight into personality theory for graduate-level students and clinicians who have not had undergraduate psychology. It should be required reading for upper-level and graduate courses in psychology, counseling, and social work."--BOOK JACKET. 0aPersonality.1 aAbrams, Mike.1 aAbrams, Lidia D.q(Lidia Dengelegi)