ABRAHAM MASLOW, MASLOW'S HIERARCHY NEEDS, ABRAHAM MASLOW'S HIERARCHY NEERDS, ABRAHAM MASLOW' PSYCHOLOGY,
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ABRAHAM MASLOW'S HIERARCHY NEERDS
2. ABRAHAM MASLOW
1908-1970
Biography
? Abraham Harold Maslow was born April 1, 1908 in Brooklyn, New York.
? He was the first of seven children born to his parents,
? who themselves were uneducated Jewish immigrants from Russia.
? His parents, hoping for the best for their children in the new world, pushed him hard for academic
success.
? Not surprisingly, he became very lonely as a boy, and found his refuge in books.
? Maslow served as the chair of the psychology department at Brandeis from 1951 to 1969.
? While there he met Kurt Goldstein, who had originated the idea of self-actualization in his famous
book, The Organism (1934).
? It was also here that he began his crusade for a humanistic psychology -- something ultimately much more
important to him than his own theorizing.
4. The physiological needs.
? These include the needs we have for oxygen, water, protein, salt, sugar, calcium, and
other minerals and vitamins.
? They also include the need to maintain a pH balance (getting too acidic or base will kill
you) and temperature (98.6 or near to it).
? Also, there¡¯s the needs to be active, to rest, to sleep, to get rid of wastes (CO2, sweat,
urine, and feces), to avoid pain, and to have sex. Quite a collection!
? Maslow believed, and research supports him, that these are in fact individual needs, and
that a lack of, say, vitamin C, will lead to a very specific hunger for things which have in
the past provided that vitamin C -- e.g. orange juice.
? I guess the cravings that some pregnant women have, and the way in which
babies eat the most foul tasting baby food, support the idea
anecdotally.
6. The safety and security needs
When the physiological needs are largely taken care of, this second layer
of needs comes into play. You will become increasingly interested in
finding safe circumstances, stability, protection. You might develop a
need for structure, for order, some limits.
Looking at it negatively, you become concerned, not with needs like hunger
and thirst, but with your fears and anxieties. In the ordinary American adult,
this set of needs manifest themselves in the form of our urges to have a
home in a safe neighborhood, a little job security and a nest egg, a good
retirement plan and a bit of insurance, and so on.
8. The love and belonging needs.
When physiological needs and
safety needs are, by and large,
taken care of, a third layer starts
to show up.
9. You begin to feel the need for friends, a sweetheart, children,
affectionate relationships in general, even a sense of community.
Looked at negatively, you become increasing susceptible to
loneliness and social anxieties.
In our day-to-day life, we exhibit these needs in our desires to
marry, have a family, be a part of a community, a member of a
church, a brother in the fraternity, a part of a gang or a bowling
club. It is also a part of what we look for in a career.
11. ? The esteem needs. Next, we begin to look for a little self-esteem.
? Maslow noted two versions of esteem needs, a lower one and a
higher one.
? The lower one is the need for the respect of others, the need for
status, fame, glory, recognition, attention, reputation,
appreciation, dignity, even dominance.
? The higher form involves the need for self-respect, including such
feelings as confidence, competence, achievement, mastery,
independence, and freedom.
? Note that this is the ¡°higher¡± form because, unlike the respect of
others, once you have self-respect, it¡¯s a lot harder to lose!
13. ? The last level is a bit different. Maslow has used a variety of terms
to refer to this level: He has called it growth motivation (in contrast
to deficit motivation), being needs (or B-needs, in contrast to D-
needs), and self-actualization.
? These are needs that do not involve balance or homeostasis. Once
engaged, they continue to be felt.
? In fact, they are likely to become stronger as we ¡°feed¡± them! They
involve the continuous desire to fulfil potentials, to ¡°be all that you
can be.¡±
? They are a matter of becoming the most complete, the fullest, ¡°you¡±
-- hence the term, self-actualization.