Abraham Maslow, born in 1908, developed the Hierarchy of Needs theory, which categorizes human needs into five levels: physiological, safety, belongingness, esteem, and self-actualization. He proposed that unmet lower needs create crises, while higher needs promote growth, and introduced the concept of metamotivation for self-actualizers, who represent a small fraction of the population. Maslow's observations highlighted that self-actualizers possess unique characteristics, including a realistic self-image, deep relationships, and a lack of prejudice.
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Maslow
Abraham Maslow, born in 1908, developed the Hierarchy of Needs theory, which categorizes human needs into five levels: physiological, safety, belongingness, esteem, and self-actualization. He proposed that unmet lower needs create crises, while higher needs promote growth, and introduced the concept of metamotivation for self-actualizers, who represent a small fraction of the population. Maslow's observations highlighted that self-actualizers possess unique characteristics, including a realistic self-image, deep relationships, and a lack of prejudice.
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CHAPTER NINE
Abraham Maslow: Needs-Hierarchy
Theory A. Life of Maslow
• Abraham Maslow was born in New York in
1908, and was the oldest of seven children. • His father was alcoholic and his mother was cruel and unaffectionate. • Maslow found books were a good refuge. • He desired to learn and went to study at Wisconsin under John Watson who taught him about behaviorism and experimental psychology. A. Life of Maslow (cont.) • After earning his Ph.D., Maslow studied with E. L. Thorndike at Columbia University and later taught at Brooklyn College. B. Personality Development: The Hierarchy of Needs • Maslow proposed a hierarchy of five innate needs. – He called these needs instinctoid, by which he meant they have a hereditary component. – These needs are ordered from lower or stronger needs to higher and weaker needs. – These needs are physiological, safety, belongingness, love, esteem, and self-actualization. – Maslow believed lower needs not being satisfied to produce a crisis or deficit, or deficiency needs; failure to satisfy them produces a deficit or lack in the individual. – Maslow called higher needs growth, or being needs. B. Personality Development: The Hierarchy of Needs (cont.) • According to Maslow, physiological needs have a greater impact as motivating forces in cultures where basic survival remains an everyday concern. B. Personality Development: The Hierarchy of Needs (cont.) • Safety and security needs are important drives for infants and neurotic adults. – Infants get upset with a threat to their safety and adults learn ways to inhibit their reactions to dangerous situations. • Children will desire a constrictive routine with some measure of freedom. • Neurotic adults compulsively avoid new experiences. B. Personality Development: The Hierarchy of Needs (cont.) • Belongingness and love needs can be expressed through a close relationship with a friend, a lover, mate, or through social relationships formed within a group. – The need to give and receive love can be satisfied in an intimate relationship with another person. B. Personality Development: The Hierarchy of Needs (cont.) • We require esteem and respect from ourselves, in the form of feelings of self- worth, and from other people, in the form of status, recognition, or social success. B. Personality Development: The Hierarchy of Needs (cont.) • Self-actualization is the highest of Maslow’s needs. A person who has obtained this need has the following conditions met in their lives: – a person free of constraints by society and themselves, must not be distracted by the lower- order needs, be secure in their self-image and be able to receive and give love, and finally, must have a realistic knowledge of their strengths and weaknesses, virtues and vices. B. Personality Development: The Hierarchy of Needs (cont.) • Maslow proposed a second set of innate needs, the cognitive needs-to know and to understand. – The need to know is stronger than the need to understand. – The need to know and to understand begins in late infancy and is expressed by children as a natural curiosity. – Failure to satisfy the cognitive needs is harmful and hampers the full development and functioning of the personality. – Maslow believed it is impossible to become self-actualizing if we fail to meet the needs to know and to understand. C. The Study of Self-Actualizers • Maslow proposed a distinct type of motivation for self-actualizers called metamotivation (sometimes called B-motivation of Being). – Motivation indicates that it goes beyond psychology’s traditional idea of motivation, implying a condition in which motivation as we know it plays no role. Instead, we say they are developing within. – Those who are not self-actualized have a D- motivation or Deficiency. C. The Study of Self-Actualizers (cont.) • A self-actualizing person’s goal is to enrich their lives by acting to increase tension to experience a variety of stimulating and challenging events. C. The Study of Self-Actualizers (cont.) • Maslow believed that only 1% or less of the population were self-actualized and that they share certain characteristics: • (a) self-actualizers have an efficient perception of reality, • (b) they accept themselves and do not distort or falsify their self-image or feel guilty, • (c) are spontaneous, simplistic, and natural, • (d) focus on problems outside of themselves, C. The Study of Self-Actualizers (cont.) • (e) have a sense of detachment and a need for privacy, • (f) have a freshness of appreciation, and • (g) have mystical or peak experiences. A peak experience is an event during which the self is transcended and the person feels powerful, confident, and decisive. C. The Study of Self-Actualizers (cont.) • According to Maslow, self-actualizers have deep, lasting relationships and display no racial, religious, or social prejudice. – They are flexible, highly creative, spontaneous, and willing to make mistakes and learn from them. – Self-actualizers are autonomous, independent, and self-sufficient. – On occasion, they can be rude, even ruthless, and they experience doubts, conflicts, and tension. C. The Study of Self-Actualizers (cont.) • Poor economic conditions, inadequate education and children who are overprotected and not permitted to try new behaviors may not reach self-actualization. • Maslow referred to another reason for the failure to self-actualize is the Jonah complex (refers to our doubts about our own abilities). D. Observations • Maslow observed people whom he thought had the characteristics of self-actualization. • Maslow’s research with college students led him to believe that young people did not have these qualities developed. • When Maslow studied people who were older, he felt less than one percent of the population was capable of meeting his criteria for self- actualization. D. Observations (cont.) • The Personal Orientation Inventory was developed by Everett Shostrum to measure Maslow’s theory of self-actualization.