Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs
Abraham Harold Maslow
Abraham Maslow was an American Psychologist born in 1908 in Brooklyn. He began his career at Brooklyn College where he became very popular among the students for his unusual combination of confidence in his subject and personal humidity. After College, he became chairman of the Department of Psychology at Brandeis University and was also president of the American Psychological Association from 1967 to 1968. (2) After World War II, Maslow begun to question the way psychologists ad come to their conclusions, and although he did not completely disagree, he had his own ideas on how to understand the human mind. He called his new discipline humanistic psychology. (Wikipedia) Maslow conducted research and studies in many areas, but he is most remembered for his hierarchy of needs and the concept of self-actualization. (2)(8) He was thinking in an original way. He urged people to acknowledge their basic needs before addressing higher needs and ultimately self-actualization. He viewed human potential as vastly underestimated and an unexplained territory. (2) Maslow died on June 8, 1970, due to a heart attack at the age of 62 in Menlo Park, California. (8)
MASLOW HIERARCHY OF NEEDS
Maslow’s hierarchy of needs is a motivational theory in psychology compromising a five-tier model of human needs. According to Maslow, we attempt to satisfy stronger motives or needs lower down in the hierarchy before trying to satisfy motives that are higher up. Because the priority of fulfilling basic needs in the hierarch is a continuing struggle, only a small number of people achieve self-actualization. (5) (3)
The five-stage model by Maslow can be divided into deficiency needs and growth needs. The first four levels are referred to as deficiency need and the top level is known as growth or being need. The motivation to fulfill deficiency needs will become stronger the longer the duration they are denied. For example, the longer person goes without food, the more hungry they will become. Our activities become habitually directed towards meeting the next set of needs as soon as a deficit need has been acceptably satisfied. Figure 1.
The original hierarchy of needs consists of a five-stage model: 1.The physiological needs These include the biological requirements for human survival such as air, food, drink, warmth, minerals, and so on to ensure homeostasis in their organisms (protection of the internal balance of the body). (4) The need for shelter and clothes, activity, rest and sleep, and avoidance of pain. One of the most basic needs is a need for physical survival. If the physiological needs are not satisfied the human body cannot function optimally. In Maslow's opinion, all of the other needs become secondary unless the basic ones are fulfilled. (1) (5)