Abstract

Dugald S. Arbuckle, an advocate of human rights in counseling and writer on the implications of existential humanistic thought in psychotherapy and education, reflects on the roots of his humanistic thinking from his boyhood days in the mining country of the Western Canadian Rockies through more than 30 years of teaching and private practice. A major contributor to the literature that has shaped counseling and psychotherapy, Arbuckle is the founder of the graduate Program in Humanistic Counseling at Boston University and served as president of the American Personnel and Guidance Association (1959–60). In this dialogue he discusses a wide and provocative range of ideas with a former student, Gerald J. Pine, currently Professor of Counselor Education at the University of New Hampshire.

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