%0 Journal Article %T Group Therapy and Its Role in Human Social Existence %J International Journal of Advanced Studies in Humanities and Social Science %I Sami Publishing Company %Z 2717-0209 %A Baghdashti, Seyed Amir Mir Hosseini %D 2023 %\ 10/01/2023 %V 12 %N 4 %P 310-316 %! Group Therapy and Its Role in Human Social Existence %K human body %K group therapy %K Emotional support %K personality development %R 10.22034/ijashss.2023.388228.1138 %X Man is inherently a social being, since he turned to group life as a necessity to overcome the violence of nature, to do better, and to obtain greater satisfaction. Aristotle considers man to be a social animal by nature. Durkheim considers belonging to a group to be the cause of satisfaction and character development. Hobbes and John locke believe that group life solves life problems and happiness and progress. Group life gives people a sense of belonging, security, and worth. Man has always felt happy to be with those around him and his relatives, and he has forgotten his sorrows and worries in public. The support of family and friends in times of crisis also brings comfort. Mesmer, who was instrumental in the emergence and expansion of group therapy, believed in the mysterious power of animal magnetism in the human body and, for the first time, used indoctrination to treat the mentally ill as a group. The regular and codified history of group therapy, which has been proposed in the nineteenth century, can be studied in the early period from 1905-1932 and the development period from 1932 to the present day, which has been studied in this paper. %U https://www.ijashss.com/article_171084_8b8ec9cdc416f7640b5bde308511f93b.pdf