Having noted this possibility, another instance comes to mind in which Rogers seemed to be unaware of his own organismic inclinations to rebel against authority. Earlier I recounted that when Rogers introduced his budding ideas in a talk he gave at the University of Minnesota they were received with great furor, no doubt because his remarks were aimed at overthrowing the traditional methods of therapy that Minnesota was famous for. In fact, the case study he critiqued in his talk had come from one of Minnesota’s own therapists. But in reflecting on this talk later, Rogers reported:
One thing that was astonishing and embarrassing to me was that I had found a very good advice-giving interview—an account of it—and I suppose it was in literature that came from Minnesota, but by the time I’d put it into my paper I wasn’t aware of where it had come from. After my talk I discovered that it was the chairman of the meeting.34
Taken from :PSYCHOLOGY’S GRAND THEORISTS How Personal Experiences Shaped Professional Ideas - Amy Demorest
