| Person-centred therapy, now considered a founding work in the [[humanistic]] school of psychotherapies, began formally with Carl Rogers.<ref name="Prochaska, J.O 2007. p.138">Prochaska, J.O & Norcross, J.C. 2007. Systems of Psychotherapy: A Transtheoretical Analysis. Thompson Books/Cole:New York, p.138</ref> "Rogerian" psychotherapy is identified as one of the major school groups, along with [[psychodynamic]], [[Psychoanalysis|psychoanalytic]] (most famously [[Sigmund Freud]]), [[Classical Adlerian psychology|Adlerian]], [[Cognitive behavioral therapy|Cognitive-behavioral therapy]], and [[Existential therapy]] (such as that pioneered by [[Rollo May]]).<ref>Prochaska, J.O & Norcross, J.C. 2007. Systems of Psychotherapy: A Transtheoretical Analysis. Thompson Books/Cole:New York, p.3</ref> | | Person-centred therapy, now considered a founding work in the [[humanistic]] school of psychotherapies, began formally with Carl Rogers.<ref name="Prochaska, J.O 2007. p.138">Prochaska, J.O & Norcross, J.C. 2007. Systems of Psychotherapy: A Transtheoretical Analysis. Thompson Books/Cole:New York, p.138</ref> "Rogerian" psychotherapy is identified as one of the major school groups, along with [[psychodynamic]], [[Psychoanalysis|psychoanalytic]] (most famously [[Sigmund Freud]]), [[Classical Adlerian psychology|Adlerian]], [[Cognitive behavioral therapy|Cognitive-behavioral therapy]], and [[Existential therapy]] (such as that pioneered by [[Rollo May]]).<ref>Prochaska, J.O & Norcross, J.C. 2007. Systems of Psychotherapy: A Transtheoretical Analysis. Thompson Books/Cole:New York, p.3</ref> |