In 1633, Galileo stood before a Church inquisition. Through his telescope, he saw a cosmos in motion with the sun at its center, and he dared to proclaim it. The Church, bound to its ancient Earth-centric system, branded it heresy and demanded he recant. Under threat, he denied his own vision. Yet, as legend later had it, he whispered as he rose, “And yet, it moves.” Authority insisted on stillness; experience revealed motion. Therapy, too, finds its ground not in decrees and assumed truth, but in what is lived, discovered, and transformed.
In Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy (CBT), “collaborative empiricism” refers to the therapist and client working as partners in exploration, discovery, and change. The client and therapist treat beliefs and behaviors as hypotheses, testing alternatives through small experiments and reflecting on the results in daily life. This process deepens understanding, empowers the client, and turns therapy into a shared journey of learning.
For Existential-Humanistic (E-H) therapy, collaboration means entering a genuine partnership of presence on a journey of discovery and change. As for empiricism, instead of understanding and correcting thoughts or interpreting feelings, for example, the therapist and client deepen lived experience and inquire into its meaning: What does this say about how you live, what you protect, or what you long for? This is a dialogical, “whole body” process, not a one-sided, rational analysis. Throughout, the client remains free to choose, and therapy becomes a shared journey toward greater freedom and more meaningful living.
Collaboration is central in both CBT and Existential-Humanistic therapy—whether as co-investigators (CBT) testing ideas or as “fellow travelers” (E-H) exploring lived experience and meanings. Openness and curiosity likewise are central to both. Integration builds on this shared spirit by reframing CBT’s empirical approach through an E-H lens. Hypotheses center around “life stances” to be explored and illuminated; designed experiments become invitations to explore freely and “test” existing ways and new possibilities of experiencing and being—often “in the room” in relationship with the therapist; data becomes lived experience, drawn from phenomenological exploration of body, mood, relationship, and so on. In this way, E-H does not dismiss “collaborative empiricism” but leverages and reshapes it into a discipline of presence, where meaning unfolds in experience and relationship with self, others, and the world.
Related Blog Posts:
Read other Existential Moment posts on Existential-Integrative therapy.
Explore the therapeutic relationship in E-H therapy in previous posts.
Read more posts about freedom, meaning-making, and working with client protections in E-H therapy on EHI’s blog.
View all the Existential Moment series posts on EHI’s blog.
Existential Moment Author: Scott Gibbs, LMFT, EHI Board Member-at-Large | Website: www.mscottgibbs.com | Twitter: @Novum_Organum
