PSYCHOLOGY
“The Study of Human Behavior”
• PSYCHE - Self, Soul, Mind
• LOGOS - Word, Reason
“ology”: theory of, study of, science of
Three contemporary psychologists/philosophers provide helpful understandings:
• Abraham Maslow
• Mihaly Csikszentmihayli
• John Rawls
“Human beings are motivated by a number of basic needs which are species wide, apparently unchanging, and genetic or instinctual in origin. They are intrinsic aspects of human nature.”
Abraham Maslow
THE NEEDS HIERARCHY
The human needs are arranged in a hierarchy, while not a strict one. Needs in the lower levels of the hierarchy generally must be satisfied before other needs emerge as needs.
PHYSIOLOGICAL NEEDS*
• Air• Water• Food
• Shelter• Sleep• Sex
*These needs are most basic and most powerful, as they are the needs we have for human survival.
SAFETY NEEDS
We need the security of a consistent, predictable, stable, and fair environment; both physically and psychologically
“A person will hunger for affectionate relations with people in general, for a place in a group, and will strive with great intensity to achieve this goal.”
“The need for love characterizes every human being born. No psychological health is possible unless a the inner nature of a person is accepted, loved and respected by others.”
Abraham Maslow
EGO NEEDS
• Self-confidence
• Self-esteem
• Self-respect
This internalized validation of ones self comes from the acceptance, recognition, esteem and respect of others. And, the qualities are most stable when it is recognized that the external validation is deserved.
“What a man can be, he must be….to become more and more what one is; to become everything one is capable of becoming.”
“Be all you can be.”
Abraham Maslow
NEEDS AS LIFETIME GOALS
• Physiologic Needs - Health
• Safety and Security
• Love and Be Loved
• Self-Esteem and Esteemed by
Others
• Realization of Full Potential as Human Being
ABRAHAM MASLOW’S HIERARCHY OF NEEDS
Self Actualization
TruthGoodness
BeautyAliveness
IndividualityPerfectionNecessity
CompletionJusticeOrder
SimplicityRichness
PlayfulnessEffortlessness
Self SufficiencyMeaningfulness
Self EsteemEsteem by Others
Loving & Belongingness
Safety and Security
PhysiologicalAir, Water Food, Shelter, Sleep, Sex
The External EnvironmentPreconditions for need satisfaction
Freedom, Justice, Orderliness Challenge(Stimulation)
*Growth needs are all of equal importance (not hierarchical)
BEING NEEDS(Metamotivation)
• Wholeness: Integration, Centeredness• Completion: Fulfillment, Finality• Justice: Fairness, Lawfulness• Simplicity: Structure, Essentiality• Beauty: Rightness, Form• Goodness: Oughtness, Rightness• Uniqueness: Individuality, Novelty• Playfulness: Fun, Joy• Truth: Reality, Essentiality• Self-Sufficiency: Autonomy,
Independence
FLOW
“The state in which people are so involved in an activity that nothing else seems to matter; the experience itself is so enjoyable that people will do it even at great cost, for the sheer sake of doing it.”
Eight Components of FLOW
• The goals of the activity are clear and not conflicting.
• One receives immediate and clear feedback during the activity.
• The challenges of the activity are matched with the skills of the person.
• A feeling of focus and concentration exists on what is being done.
• One is oblivious to everyday frustrations.
• A feeling of control over life, actions, and experiences exists.
• One loses a sense of self-consciousness. (ego defenses)
• Sense of time is transformed.
CSIKSZENTMIHALYI’S TENETS
• Happiness is a condition that must be prepared for and cultivated by a person.
• People who learn to control inner experience will be able to determine the quality of their lives, which is about as close as any of us can come to being happy.
• Optimal experiences are those times when we feel in control of our actions, masters of our own fate … and when we experience a deep sense of exhilaration and deep sense of joy.
CSIKSZENTMIHALYI’S TENETS(continued)
• The best moments usually occur when a person’s body or mind is stretched to its limits in a voluntary effort to accomplish something difficult and worthwhile.
• Optimal experience is something we can make happen.
• In the long run, optimal experiences are up to a sense of mastery, or sense of participation in the determination of the content of one’s life.
“Complexity is not only a function of intelligence, or knowledge … it includes a
person’s feelings and actions as well. It involves becoming aware of and in control of one’s unique potentials, and in being able to create harmony between goals
and desires, sensations and experiences.
People who continue this (greater degrees of complex thinking and action) are going to have a more
fulfilling and therefore happy life.”
M. CsikszentmihayliThe Evolving Self
ARISTOTELIAN PRINCIPLE
“Human beings enjoy the exercise of their realized capacities (their innate or trained abilities), and this enjoyment increases the more the capacity is realized, or the greater its complexity.”
John RawlsTheory of Justice
“ARISTOTELIAN PRINCIPLE” AT
WORKCheckers ---- Chess
Poker ---- Bridge
Badminton ---- Tennis
Algebra ---- Calculus
Preparing aCan of Soup
---- PreparingSouffle
MiniatureGolf
---- "TheMasters"
WHY IS THE “ARISTOTELIAN
PRINCIPLE” TRUE?
• Our brains/minds are remarkable tools with great capacity.
• We get bored easily.
• Complex activities are more enjoyable because they satisfy the desire for variety and novelty.
• Complex activities leave room for ingenuity and intervention.
• Complex activities evoke the reaction of anticipation and surprise.
• Complex activities fascinate.
• Simple activities exclude possibility of individual style and personal expression.
ELEMENTS OF HAPPINESS
MONEY. POWER. FAME.
NO...
According to research by Psychologist Kennon M. Sheldon of the University of Missouri, the things that really make one happy are:
• SELF ESTEEM• INTIMACY WITH OTHERS• SENSE OF AUTONOMY• THE FEELING OF COMPETENCE
ELEMENTS OF HAPPINESS
Why?
Close relationships with others and a positive self-image are sources of joy that replenish you again and again, while the thrill that comes from buying something, such as a new car, vanishes the moment you see the next ‘item’ you want. His recommendation: “Worry less about what you have and more about who you are*
* This is the theme of an excellent book by Erich mm entitled, To Have Or To Be.
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