Dr. Albert Ellis, 93, Creator of Psychology's
Cognitive Revolution, Dies
July 24, 2007

Dr.
Albert Ellis, the controversial psychologist who revolutionized the
field of psychology when he created Rational Emotive Therapy in 1955,
died at home on July 24, 2007. His wife, Debbie Joffe was with him.
He was 93. He had been seriously ill for more than a year.
Dr. Ellis was born in Pittsburgh
on
September 27, 1913, and was raised in New York City. He received his M.A. (1943) and
Ph.D. (1947) degrees in clinical psychology from Columbia University. He practiced psychotherapy, marriage and family counseling and sex
therapy for over sixty years. He was the founder of Rational Emotive
Therapy, the first of the now-popular cognitive therapies. In later
years, he called his creation Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy, REBT.
Recognizing the slowness and
frequent ineffectiveness of Freudian psychoanalysis, Albert Ellis broke
away from it in January 1953, calling himself a rational therapist. He
presented REBT to the psychological community in 1955, starting a
revolutionary paradigm shift in the way psychology thought about human
problems and changing the way psychotherapy is practiced around the
world.
REBT is a comprehensive approach to
psychological issues and problems that deals with the emotional and
behavioral aspects of human disturbance, and places emphasis on how
people think. REBT reminds people that they control their own emotional
destiny according to whether they think in healthy, rational ways or
unhealthy, irrational ways. It teaches people how to forcefully analyze
and change their self-defeating thoughts and behaviors. A major aspect
of REBT is unconditional acceptance of self, others and life.
His influence extended into areas
other than psychology, including education, politics, business and
philosophy. He wrote extensively on the problems the world currently
faces, such as terrorism and nuclear weapons.
Dr. Ellis received the highest
awards from professional societies, including recently the New York
State Psychological Association's Lifetime Distinguished Service Award.
In a 1982 survey, American and Canadian psychologists rated Albert Ellis
as having more influence on psychology than Sigmund Freud, Carl Jung or
B.F. Skinner. Psychology Today called him The Prince of Reason.
The New Yorker Magazine reported that in the off-Broadway play "Trumbo",
Dr. Ellis was called "the greatest humanitarian since Gandhi."
Until he fell ill at the age of 92
in May 2006, Dr. Ellis typically worked at least 16 hours a day, writing
books in longhand on legal tablets, visiting with clients and teaching.
Even while seriously ill, he continued to see students at the
rehabilitation center where he was recuperating. He even taught from his
hospital bed, giving his last two hour workshop to a group of students
from Belgium
who visited his hospital room on
March 29. In addition to pneumonia, he had had a heart attack that
morning, but he refused to cancel the meeting.
In his later years, Dr. Ellis also
worked despite profound hearing loss. He was assisted in his work by his
wife, Australian psychologist Debbie Joffe. She facilitated his
workshops, contributing pertinent points in response to audience
questions. Their outstanding rapport helped showcase Dr. Ellis' famous
and at-times irreverent humor, as together they taught the principles of
REBT to large and small groups.
Humor was an important part of his
philosophy and he applied it to his own life challenges, using himself
as an example to teach people how to deal with serious adversities. He
was also a writer of his unique rational humorous songs. He had said
that if he was not a psychologist he would have enjoyed being a
composer.
Dr. Ellis was also as one of the
founders of the American sexual revolution. His ground-breaking 1958
book, "Sex Without Guilt," created a national discussion
leading to a change in the way people think about sexual experience. He
wrote more than 75 books, 200 audio tapes and 1,200 articles. His
autobiography will be published posthumously by Prometheus Press. Other
books, including one on REBT and Buddhism, also await publication.
He held many important positions in
the field of psychology, including chief psychologist of the state of
New Jersey
and adjunct professor at Rutgers
and other universities. He had been the president of the Division of
Consulting Psychology of the American Psychological Association and
president of the Society for the Scientific Study of Sexuality and
several other professional boards.
In 1971, the American Humanist
Association named Albert Ellis the Humanist of the Year.
In relation to religion and God,
Albert Ellis called himself a probabilistic atheist, meaning it is
impossible to be 100 percent certain there is no God. Many people
considered him spiritual for his tireless contributions to others. In
later years, he wrote and spoke about similarities between REBT and
aspects of Buddhism, with both philosophies teaching unconditional
acceptance of life.
On his 90th birthday, Dr. Ellis
listened to congratulatory messages from New York Mayor Michael
Bloomberg, Sens. Chuck Schumer and Hillary Clinton, former President
Bill Clinton and President George W. Bush. In honor of the occasion, he
was given a white silk scarf that had been blessed by the Dalai Lama.
In 1959, Albert Ellis established
the Institute for Rational Living, a non-profit organization with the
mission to advance and popularize REBT and to provide low-cost
counseling to the public. In 1964, he used his personal funds to
purchase a six-story mansion on 65th Street
in Manhattan. This building housed what came to be
called the Albert Ellis Institute.
He lived frugally in an apartment
on the top floor, supporting the institute's mission by donating all his
personal income to the institute's operation. For almost 50 years, the
world's most famous living psychologist took only a $12,000 a year
salary for himself, plus living accommodations and a promise of lifetime
medical care. He could have been a millionaire many times over had he
kept the income from his best-selling books and thousands of therapy
sessions.
In 2004, after Dr. Ellis
experienced a life-threatening medical crisis, the board of trustees of
the Albert Ellis Institute said his medical expenses had become too
great and they stopped paying for the at-home nursing care that allowed
him to continue working full time. Dr. Ellis had always saved and wisely
invested a portion of his small earnings. This cushion of funds was used
to pay for his medical care.
In July 2005, the board of trustees
barred him from using institute facilities for his popular Friday Night
Workshops for the public, which had been a Manhattan
fixture for more than four decades.
Ellis responded by relocating his workshops and conducting them in exile
in a rented building, aided by his wife Debbie Joffe. In front of
standing-room-only crowds, they gave live demonstrations of REBT with
audience volunteers.
The direction the Albert Ellis
Institute will take in the future remains unresolved. Despite Dr. Ellis'
strong preference that the institute promote Rational Emotive Behavior
Therapy as its sole mission, REBT is now only one of several approaches
offered by the organization that bears his name.
In October 2005, Dr. Ellis sued his
own institute after its trustees voted by a narrow margin to remove him
from the board and to suspend him from all professional duties.
In a stunning decision, the Supreme
Court for New York County returned Dr. Ellis to the Board of Trustees in
January 2006, with the judge calling the actions taken against Dr. Ellis
by the other trustees "disingenuous" and "offensive and
contrary to our fundamental process of democratic and legal procedure,
fair play and the spirit of the law."
Despite the judge's ruling, the
board of trustees prevented Dr. Ellis from any meaningful participation
in running the Albert Ellis Institute and his professional duties were
not restored.
Fans and professional colleagues
used the Internet to create a spontaneous international network of
support for Dr. Ellis and REBT. Fansites, discussion forums and Web
sites were created in his honor. The trustees of the Albert Ellis
Institute then claimed trademark rights to the "Albert Ellis"
name, threatening to sue his advocates and supporters for trademark
infringement.
Dr. Ellis rejected the Institute's
trademark use of his name, calling the current Institute
"fake" and likening its Trustees to "pirates" who
plundered his life's work.
Also left unresolved at the time of
Dr. Ellis' death is a breach- of-contract lawsuit seeking repayment of
Dr. Ellis' medical expenses, ownership of his extensive archives and
return of the $20 million Albert Ellis Institute mansion in Manhattan
through imposition of a constructive
trust.
Dr. Ellis believed the current
institute that bears his name no longer represented his life work and
mission. Friends and supporters intend to keep REBT alive and vital, as
he created it. He suggested they do this by using his philosophy in
their own lives to promote personal peace and happiness and by teaching
REBT to other people. He remained dedicated to the principles of
liberty, justice and freedom.
Dr. Ellis is survived by his wife,
Debbie Joffe. He embarked on his third marriage at age 90, surprising
many people. He said that after several years of friendship, he wanted
to marry Debbie because she was the kindest and most giving woman he had
ever met, and also the most dedicated to practicing the principles of
REBT. He told his supporters that although he'd had several great love
affairs in his long life, he loved Debbie Joffe more than any other
woman he had ever lived with or loved before.
Debbie personally cared for her
husband continuously during the time of his serious illness, seldom
leaving his bedside and making it possible for him to continue teaching,
promoting REBT and engaging in work he loved, even when he was bedridden
and suffering discomfort.
Dr. Ellis is also survived by
several nephews.
A public memorial service will be
held at St. Paul
's Chapel at Columbia University
on Friday, September 28,
2007, at 7:30 p.m.