Paul Helwig

Paul Julius Adolf Helwig (May 27, 1893 August 7, 1963) was a German stage-manager, script-writer, philosopher and psychologist, who has contributed in an original way to the analysis of human behavior. He was born in Lübeck, Germany, and died in Munich.

His psychological approach has as a starting-point the chains of reactions and events which normally result (and should result !) from acting, and in which one remains involved because they present one possibilities to seize, problems to solve as well as challenges to take. This is typical for the literary drama, but can be seen (and should be seen !) in a less concentrated way in daily life. Problematic, if not pathological, behavior may arise if conditions for starting and continuing such a "drama of life" are insufficiently met. One of those conditions, the main one, is what Helwig calls "resistance": the resistance the physical and social environment offer to one's aims. If it is too much acting will be blocked, if it is too small action will be short-lived and be in want of intensity and impact.

Helwig characterizes his approach both as dramaturgical (1958) and behavioristic (1964), the latter because overt behavior is seen as the primary phenomenon, to be explained from the interaction action-environment instead of hypothetical inner forces and features. His "behaviorism" starts, however, from very molar behavior units, unlike American behaviorism.

Works by Paul Helwig

Philosophical-psychological work

Plays

(list may not be complete)

Films

(list may be incomplete; in 1943 en '44 he was involved in making movies in Vienna and Prague)

Otherwise

(list perhaps not complete)

Nonsensical poems, which he pretends to stem from the heritage of a distant cousin, with a great many neologisms.

References

Prudon, Peter (2009): Ago ergo sum : Ik doe, dus ik ben. Het menselijk handelen vanuit existentieel-psychologisch gezichtspunt. (Amsterdam: FZP-press.)
(Ago ergo sum : I act, therefore I am. Human action from an existential-psychological point of view. ) external link.

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 4/15/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.