Abstract
The following presents similar perspectives from two of his peers on a most unusual man: Arthur Warmoth. About Arthur Warmoth, Eleanor Criswell, emeritus psychology professor at Sonoma State University, says: Arthur Warmoth, PhD, was born July 18, 1937, in Red Bluff, California. He died April 4, 2014, in his home in Rohnert Park, California. He was married to Georgina A. Warmoth, originally from Torreon, Mexico. The couple had three children: Monica Hinson, Arthur Warmoth, and Tonantzin Warmoth. He had a deeply fulfilling family life. Art was graduated from Reed College in 1959 with a BA in Theatre Arts and Literature. While at Reed, he was a member of the Latino Democratic Club. Art was a significant contributor to the field of humanistic psychology. He studied under Abraham Maslow, James Klee, and Ulric Neisser at Brandeis University, where he earned his PhD in 1967. He joined the psychology faculty of Sonoma State University in 1969 and was named full professor in 1985. Before coming to Sonoma State University, he worked as a clinical psychologist at Mendocino State Hospital in Talmage, California. In 1986, he was visiting professor at the Universidad Autonoma de la Laguna in Torreon, Coahuila, Mexico. After 41 years as professor of psychology at Sonoma State University, he became an emeritus faculty member, continuing to work on university projects. His organizational involvements included serving as an at-large board member, Division 32, Humanistic Psychology (now the Society for Humanistic Psychology), and he served as president of the Association for
Published Version
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