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Title: Abraham Maslow Becoming Self-Actualized I. Biography Growin


1
Abraham Maslow
  • Becoming Self-Actualized

2
I. Biography
  • Growing up a Jewish boy in a predominantly
    non-Jewish neighborhood, Maslow sought solace in
    the library reading.
  • Maslow, urged by his parents (Russian
    immigrants), enrolled in law school in CUNY.
    However, he found it dull dropped out during
    the 1st year.
  • He attended Cornell then the University of
    Wisconsin to study psychology (finished doctorate
    at UW).
  • Initially drawn to psychology due to behaviorism,
    his interest in that particular field of
    psychology diminished.

3
Biography (contd.)
  • Maslow worked with Harry Harlow at Wisconsin.
  • After graduation Maslow went to Columbia U. to
    work with E. L. Thorndike.
  • The birth of his daughter was a peak experience
    for Maslow, who decided behaviorism wasnt for
    him.
  • Maslow taught at Brooklyn College for 14 yrs,
    where he came into contact with Neofreudians
    (Horney, Fromm, Adler) Max Wertheimer, a
    founder of Gestalt psychology.
  • He moved to Brandeis U. until his death in 1970.

4
II. Motivation Hierarchy of Needs
  • Maslow was interested in what motivates us.
  • He looked at the kinds of issues people worry
    about now (relationships with others, being happy
    in ones career life, living up to ones
    potential) in the 30s during the Great
    Depression when people were literally starving to
    death in the streets.
  • It struck him that there are two types of motives
    that guide our behavior Deficiency motives
    growth needs.

5
A. Deficiency motive (needs)
  • This results from a lack of some needed object.
  • Needs like hunger, thirst, the need for respect
    from others fall into this category.
  • These are satisfied once the needed object is
    obtained.

6
B. Growth needs
  • Unlike deficiency needs, these needs are not
    satisfied once the target object has been found.
  • Rather, the satisfaction comes from the growth
    that provides the expression of this motive.
  • Examples of growth needs include the unselfish
    giving of love to others the development of
    potential as a human being. The process is as
    important if not more than the outcome.
  • Motto Strive to be the best person you can
    be!!!

7
III. Maslows Hierarchy of Needs
  • Maslow argued that human motives can be placed in
    a hierarchy of prominence.
  • Some needs demand satisfaction before others can
    be met.
  • Usually, we satisfy the needs at the lower levels
    before becoming concerned with the needs at the
    higher levels.
  • (e.g., if you are hungry, your behavior will be
    focused on foraging. You will be less concerned
    with making friends with others when you are
    dying of hunger.)

8
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9
1. Physiological Needs-are biological needs
  • They consist of needs for oxygen, food, water,
    a relatively constant body temperature.
  • They are the strongest needs because if a person
    were deprived of all needs, the physiological
    ones would come first in the person's search for
    satisfaction.
  • We need these for basic survival.

10
2. Safety Needs
  • When all physiological needs are satisfied no
    longer dominating our thoughts behaviors, we
    progress to safety needs.
  • These include the need for security.
  • We often have little awareness of these, except
    in times of emergency disorganization in social
    structure (war time, terrorist acts, domestic
    violence, natural disasters).

11
3. Belongingness Love needs
  • When safety physiological needs are met, we
    desire, to be loved by others to belong.
  • Maslow states that people seek to overcome
    feelings of loneliness alienation.
  • This involves both giving receiving love,
    affection the sense of belonging (family,
    friends, social groups).

12
4. Esteem Needs
  • After the first 3 classes of needs are met, the
    needs for esteem can become dominant.
  • These involve needs for both self-esteem for
    the esteem a person gets from others.
  • Humans have a need for a stable, firmly based,
    high level of self-respect, respect from
    others.
  • When these needs are satisfied, the person feels
    self-confident valuable as a person in the
    world. When these needs are frustrated, the
    person feels inferior, weak, helpless
    worthless.

13
5. Need for Self-Actualization
  • When all of the foregoing needs are satisfied,
    then only then are the needs for
    self-actualization activated.
  • Maslow describes self-actualization as a person's
    need to be do that which the person was "born
    to do." "A musician must make music, an artist
    must paint, a poet must write."
  • These needs make themselves felt in signs of
    restlessness (person feels edgy, tense, lacking
    something, in short, restless. )
  • The person must be true to his or her own nature,
    be what you are meant to be.

14
On Self-Actualization
  • Maslow believed that very few people reach the
    state of self-actualization.
  • Although we all have the need to move toward the
    goal of reaching our full potential, other needs
    may get in the way.

15
IV. Misconceptions about Maslows Hierarchy of
Needs
  • 1. Maslow himself agreed that his 5-level need
    hierarchy oversimplifies the relationship between
    needs behavior.
  • 2. The order of needs makes sense for most of
    us, though there may be some notable exceptions
    (e.g., some people need to satisfy their needs
    for self-esteem respect before they can enter a
    love relationship).
  • 3. We may so desire fulfilling a need that we
    sacrifice others below it (e.g., The starving
    actor/artist).

16
V. The study of psychologically healthy people
  • Maslow was interested in studying people who are
    psychologically healthy.
  • These were people who had become self-actualized.
    He interviewed these people to see how they were
    able to satisfy all of the needs on the
    hierarchy.
  • He conducted what he called a holistic analysis
    in which he sought general impressions from his
    efforts to understand these people in depth.

17
What are Self-Actualized People Like?
  • 1. They tend to accept themselves for what they
    are. They freely admit their weaknesses, but do
    make attempts to improve.
  • 2. They dont worry excessively over the
    mistakes they have made, but instead focus on
    improving.
  • 3. They respect feel good about themselves.
    However, this self love is healthy not
    narcissistic.
  • 4. They are less restricted by cultural norms
    than the average person. They feel free to
    express their desires, even if contrary to the
    popular view.

18
5. These folks are creative
  • 6. They are innovative creative at solving
    problems.
  • 7. They have relatively few friends, but the
    friendships are deep rewarding.
  • 8. They have a great sense of humor, poking fun
    at the human condition.
  • 9. These people have frequent peak experiences,
    in which time place are transcended, anxieties
    are lost, a unity of self with the universe is
    obtained (birth of a child, marriage, deciding to
    go to school).
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