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Maslow: Holistic-Dynamic Theory (2. Maslow's View of Motivation…
Maslow: Holistic-Dynamic Theory
2. Maslow's View of Motivation
Hierarchy of Needs
Prepotency
Aesthetic Needs
Neurotic Needs
Cognitive Needs
General Discussion of Needs
Unmotivated behavior
Expressive and coping behavior
Reversed order of needs
Deprivation of needs
Comparison of higher and lower needs
Instinctoid nature of needs
3. Self Actualization
Maslow's Quest for the Self-Actualizing Person
Criteria for Self-Actualization
Have progressed through hierarchy of needs
Embracing of the B-Values
Free of psychopathology
Full use of talents, capacities, & potentialities
Characteristic of Self-Actualizing People
Acceptance of self, others, and nature
Spontaneity, simplicity, and naturalness
More efficient of reality
The need for privacy
Autonomy
The democratic character structure
Problem Centering
Discrimination between means and ends
Gemeinschaftsgefuhl
Profound interpersonal relations
The peak experience
Philosophical sense of humor
Continued freshness of appreciation
Creativeness
Resistance to enculturation
Love, Sex and Self-Actualization
B-love
D-love
Value of Self-Actualizers
B(being)-Value
3. Philosophy of Science
Science with value
5. Measuring Self-Actualization
Personal Orientation Inventory
6. Jonah's Complex
Fear doing one's best
Feeling of "this is too much"
Self-defeating approach
7. Psychotherapy
Goal - Embrace the being-values
Freeing client from dependence on others
1. Maslow's Basic Assumption of Motivation
People are continually motivated by one need or another
Motivation is Complex
All people everywhere are motivated by the same basic needs
Needs can be arranged on a hierarchy
Holistic approach to motivation
“My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.”
2 Corinth 12:9
~ SOLI DEO GLORIA ~