6[6]Perver K Baran.An examination of ecological psychology and phenomenology and their applicability to the study of landscape aesthetics[R],2004:12-14.
7[8]Kazdin A E.Encyclopedia of psychology[M].Washington D C.APA,2000:163
3[2]Willard F. Day. The Historical Antecedents of Con temporary Behaviorism[A]. R. W. Rieber. Kurt Salzinger. Psychology, Theoretical - historical Perspectives [C]. New York : Academic Press,1980.
4[3]E. Paci. The Function of the Sciences and the Mean ing of Man[M]. Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1972.
5[4]S. Halling, A. Carroll. Existential- Phenomenological Psychology[A]. Donald Moss. Humanistic and Transpersonal Psychology: A Historical and Biographical Sourcebook[C]. New York :Greenwood Press, 1999.
6[6]Alan E. Kazdin. Encyclopedia of Psychology[M]. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000.
7[7]C. W. Tageson. Humanistic Psychology: A Synthesis[M]. Chicago :Dorsey Press, 1982.
8[8]J. R. Royce, L. P. Mos. Humanistic Psychology: Concepts and Criticisms. New York: Plenum Press, 1981.
9[9]Ian Rory Owen. Introducing an existential-Phe nomenological Approach: Part 1 - Basic Phenomenological Theory and Research[J]. Counseling Psychology Quarterly, 1994,7(3).
10Moss D. (Eds.) Humanistic and transpersonal psychology: A historical and biographical sourcebook. Greenwood press, 1999, 95- 125.