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Maslow (1908-1970). Need Hierarchy Theory. Early Influences. 1941: horrified by hatred in WWII, wanted to find and study “best specimens of mankind” While studying two of his most admired people (Wertheimer & Benedict) he noticed patterns that could be applied to all people.
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Maslow (1908-1970) Need Hierarchy Theory
Early Influences • 1941: horrified by hatred in WWII, wanted to find and study “best specimens of mankind” • While studying two of his most admired people (Wertheimer & Benedict) he noticed patterns that could be applied to all people
Scientific Approaches • Reductive-analytic approach to science: • Reduce object to component parts • Psychoanalytic • Behaviorist • Desacralize: to distort human nature and make it less marvelous and dignified • Holistic-analytic approach to science: • Totality of object (both pos. & neg.) • Humanistic (Third Force)
Needs • Human needs are instinctoid (or innate) • Different from animal instincts b/c they are weaker, less absolute • Hierarchy of human needs • Bottom: strongest, humans and animals • Top: weakest, humans only
1. physiological needs • Food • Water • Sex • Elimination • Sleep
2. safety needs • Structure • Order • Security • Predictability
3. belongingness & love needs • Friends • Companions • Supportive Family • Identification w/ a Group • Intimate Relationship
4. esteem needs • Recognition from Other People • Prestige • Acceptance • Status • Self-Esteem • Adequacy • Competence • Confidence
Desire to Know and Understandtools used to solve problems with satisfying basic needssecrecy, censorship will prevent satisfying needs
Those are all deficiency needs. There is something higher.
5. self-actualization • Develop potentials and talents • Fulfill mission (call) in life • Understand and accept own nature • Create unity or integration within self
Growth occurs spontaneously, if lower order needs are met. • However, lower needs do not have to be 100% satisfied to move on to a higher need • Person usually addressing more than one level at a time • People long deprived of a need may never progress to higher needs • Very talented people may proceed directly to self-actualization w/o satisfying lower needs
Self-actualization (B-Needs) Lower-order needs (D-Needs)
Differences between D-motivation & B-motivation • D-motivation: deficiency • Need-directed perception; D perception; D cognition; deficiency motives (D motives) • Person motivated by absence of needed elements; non-self-actualizing • B-motivation: being • Growth motivation; B perception; "metamotivated“ • Person motivated by personal inner growth; self-actualizing
D-love is jealous (selfish, self-directed; need for love and belongingness) • B-love is trusting (nonpossessive; allows partner to grow)
Metapathology • Failure to satisfy a b-need • Truth: Dishonesty (cynicism, distrust) • Justice: Injustice (jungle worldview) • Playfulness: Humorlessness (depression, loss of zest in life) • Peak Experience • Being experiences that have intense feelings of ecstasy • Catching the winning touchdown at the Superbowl • Performing a song “just right”
efficient perception of reality • Not colored by needs/defenses • Enables person to perceive deception, judge others accurately
acceptance • Recognize who they and others really are • Not burdened by undue guilt, anxiety, shame • Feel no need to convert others • Accept both weaknesses and strengths in others without feeing threatened
spontaneity • Tend to be true to their feelings • Do not hide behind a mask
problem-centered • Committed to a task or a cause, not preoccupied with themselves
need for privacy (solitude) • Company of others not needed at all times • Rely on their own interpretations of events, rather than other peoples’
autonomy • Independence from culture & environment • Outside rewards (acclaim from others) less important than inner growth and development
freshness of appreciation • Continuously experience events with awe, wonder • These experiences create energy
peak experiences • Embracing of B-values
human kinship • Desire to help all humanity
interpersonal relationships • Only a few, but deep, friendships
strong ethical sense • Awareness of ethical implications for all their actions
sense of humor • Being able to laugh at yourself • Not finding humor in events that degrade or harm others
creativity • Found in all self-actualized people
resistance to enculturation • Tend to be nonconformists (i.e., if cultural norm contradicts what they believe, they will not conform)
But… self-actualized people are not perfect. -boring, stubborn, irritating, vain - occasionally ruthless - temper outburst - silly, wasteful, thoughtless habits
Self-Actualized People Rare (1%) • Why? Obstacles to Self-Actualization • Self-actualization is at the top of the hierarchy, which makes it weaker than any of the other needs • Most people fear uncertainty, esp. when it is related to personal self-knowledge • Threat to self-concept • Jonah complex
Jonah complex • Fear of one’s own greatness, running from one’s destiny and best talents • Named after the biblical Jonah, who tried to escape his fate
Self-Actualized People Rare (1%) Why? continued • Choice between safety & growth • Freedom within limits 4. Cultural environment
Criticisms • Biased toward Western cultures • Overly optimistic • Unscientific • Exceptions exist • Who can be self-actualized?