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  1. link.springer.com › referenceworkentry › 10May, Rollo | SpringerLink

    Jan 1, 2020 · May, Rollo. Rollo May is considered the grandfather of the Existential School of counseling and psychotherapy, which builds upon the classic psychoanalytic movement – a movement he both appreciated and critiqued. He was born in 1909 in Ohio and died in 1994 in northern California. May studied at Oberlin College and served as a high school ...

  2. Rollo May was born April 21, 1909, in Ada, Ohio. His childhood was not particularly pleasant: His parents didn’t get along and eventually divorced, and his sister had a psychotic breakdown. After a brief stint at Michigan State (he was asked to leave because of his involvement with a radical student magazine), he attended Oberlin College in Ohio, where he received his bachelors degree.

  3. Oct 22, 1994 · Rollo May (April 21, 1909 – October 22, 1994) was an American existential psychologist. He authored the influential book Love and Will during 1969. Although he is often associated with humanistic psychology, his philosophy was influenced strongly by existentialist philosophy. May was a close friend of the theologian Paul Tillich.

  4. Rollo May (1909-1994) taught at Harvard, Princeton, and Yale, and was Regents' Professor at the University of California, Santa Cruz. An influential psychologist, he was the best-selling author of Love and Will, as well as the author of The Courage to Create, Man's Search for Himself, The Meaning of Anxiety, and Psychology and the Human Dilemma.

  5. Dec 7, 2023 · Rollo May (1909-1994) was an American existential psychologist and a co-founder of humanistic psychology. He was influenced by existentialist philosophy, especially by Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, and Camus, and by his friend, the theologian Paul Tillich. He wrote several influential books on topics such as anxiety, choice, responsibility ...

  6. May 11, 2017 · Rollo May. Drawing on his quarter-century experience as a psychoanalytic therapist working with people trying to wrest from their inner turmoil an existential serenity, May writes: Love and will are interdependent and belong together.

  7. Rollo May once joked that in his World War I–era youth, folks around him "thought Homer was something Babe Ruth knocked out" and that, aside from the Bible, the only book his parents owned was John Bunyan's tale of salvation, Pilgrim's Progress. May meant the quip to mark his own progress from modest roots in small-town Michigan to international fame as one of the most influential psychologists and public intellectuals in post–World War II America. His books—The Meaning of Anxiety, Man ...

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