Kirk J. Schneider, PhD, i s a licensed psychologist and leading spokesperson for contemporary existential-humanistic psychology. Dr. Schneider is past president (2015-2016) of APA Division 32 (Society for Humanistic Psychology); past editor of the Journal of Humanistic Psychology (2005-2012); president-elect of the Existential-Humanistic Institute; and adjunct faculty at Saybrook University and Teachers College, Columbia University. A Fellow of APA, Dr. Schneider has published more than 100 articles and chapters and has authored or edited 11 books. These books include T he Paradoxical Self, Horror and the Holy, The Psychology of Existence (with Rollo May), Rediscovery of Awe, Existential-Integrative Psychotherapy , Humanity's Dark Side: Evil, Destructive Experience , and Psychotherapy (with Art Bohart, Barbara Held, and Ed Mendelowitz), Awakening to Awe , The Polarized Mind, and Supervision Essentials for Existential-Humanistic Therapy (with Orah Krug). The Wiley World Handbook of Existential Therapy (with Emmy van Deurzen et al.
) and The Spirituality of Awe: Challenges to the Robotic Revolution are in preparation . Dr. Schneider is the recipient of the Rollo May Award from APA Division 32 for "outstanding and independent pursuit of new frontiers in humanistic psychology"; the Cultural Innovator award from The Living Institute, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, a psychotherapy training center that bases its diploma on Schneider's existential-integrative model of therapy; and an honorary diploma/membership from the Society for Existential Analysis of the United Kingdom and the East European Association of Existential Therapy. Orah T. Krug, PhD, is a licensed psychotherapist with a private practice in Oakland, California. She is the clinical training director of the Existential-Humanistic Institute of San Francisco and teaches at Saybrook Graduate School. Dr. Krug received her doctorate from Saybrook Graduate School, where she was awarded the Rollo May Scholarship for an essay comparing the theoretical approaches of her two mentors, James Bugental and Irvin Yalom.
She has produced two videos, Conversations With Jim and "Joe": A Demonstration of the Consultation Process, with James Bugental. Her current research focuses on the relationship between the cultivation of intra- and interpersonal presence and the contextual factors of therapy associated with therapeutic change. Her article in the Journal of Humanistic Psychotherapy, "James Bugental and Irvin Yalom: Two Masters of Existential Therapy Cultivate Presence in the Therapeutic Encounter", began an exploration of this research.