In the 1950s, A fairly unusual be-spectacled and slender Lieutenant Gilbert Daniels was tasked to solve one of the biggest problems in the US Air Force: Plane crashes.
What he unravelled in the process holds a unique lesson for psychotherapists, and why we have been failing to implement and scale “evidence-based” practices as we try to fit the “average person” instead of the individual.
Or Listen to Frontiers Radio and past episodes on anywhere you listen to podcasts (Spotify, Apple, RSS feed, direct from our site).
Show Notes:
- The story of Gilbert Daniels was taken from Todd Rose’s book, The End of Average.
- Here’s a link to Gilbert Daniels 1952 article The “Average Man.”
- Following the GPS: Three Japanese students drove into the sea.
- First segment of the podcast is based on the blogpost Adjustable Seats
- Carl Rogers Sayin that he is not a “Rogerian” Carl Rogers Person Centered Approach Documentary
- Carl Jung saying he is not a “Jungian,” see Carl Jung, Jung: A Biography [Hannah], Page 78.
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