corporating dualistic concepts of mind and bodily freedom. Some of the major names associated with this movement are Adler, Frankl, Ellis, Maslow, May, and Rogers. These psychologists are sometimes called freedom theorists, those who believed that people are holistic units, capable of decision independent of external constraint but in accordance with the inner premises, cognitions, motives, needs and goals of the individual. Frankl's writing is especially interesting, as he developed his views of mental freedom while imprisoned in a Nazi concentration camp during World War II. Maslow, May, and Rogers claimed that people have a wide range of choice and actually create themselves and their lives according to personal choice. Sometimes their theories and work are termed the Human Potential Movement, a wave of thinking that
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