The correct answer is both approaches are generally considered insight therapies.
Due to the fact that Freud creator of Psychoanalysis developed the idea of psychotherapy - therapy that, through speech, treats psychic problems - Psychoanalysis is considered the first school of psychotherapy.
Psychoanalysis emerged in 1901 and one of the main bases is the notion of the unconscious, understanding that unconscious issues can influence or generate current symptoms.
The role of the psychoanalyst is to help the patient to remember, recover and reintegrate unconscious materials so that the current life is more satisfying. One of the ways of working is through free association, in which the patient verbalizes everything he thinks without censorship and the psychoanalyst interprets these contents. In the course of intensive psychoanalytic treatment, the nature of relationships originating in each individual's childhood is investigated.
Humanistic psychology emerged in the 1950s and was termed as the third force of psychology, as it opposed Psychoanalysis and the behavioral approach. Humanistic psychology rejects the idea that every human being has a basic neurosis and considers that everyone has the capacity for normal growth and development.
The therapist's role then is not to direct, but to create a welcoming and empathetic environment in which the human being can develop in the direction in which he chooses and so that he can really be who he is.
John Rawls tossed this Latin expression around "a blank state" to enable us to comprehend ourselves in a circumstance in which there were no tenets. We needed to build up the standards for how we would communicate with each other exclusively and in business. Rawls trusted that judicious souls would concur on some fundamental and reasonable tenets that would help them additionally secure others.
The EU is a political and economic union of 28 countries, which developed an internal single market through a standardised system of laws. Politically, these 28 countries are linked by the European Parliament, the European Commission, the Council of Europe and the European Council (the last two have similar names, but they have different functionalities). Economically, by the ECB - the European Central Bank. Monetarily, by the Eurozone and the currency EURO, which is present in 19/28 countries. Also, there's a Schengen area, where passports are abolished and you can travel freely, BUT not all the countries that are in the EU, are in Schengen area (ex. Romania, Bulgaria); and vice-versa: Norway is not in the EU, but is part of the Schengen area.
I hope I helped, I used to have a "map" of interactions of all these countries in different unions/institutions, but cannot find it. If you need one to help you understand the EU better, tell me and I'll intensively look for it!
Update: here's the map.
Answer:
Explanation:
when only one participant wielded a threat (used the gate to block the opponent), the person with the gate won more money
When both participants could wield threats, both sides lost money.