maslow's
hierarchy of needs
Abraham Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs
motivational model
Abraham Maslow developed the Hierarchy of Needs model in 1940-50s USA,
and the Hierarchy of Needs theory remains valid today for understanding human
motivation, management training, and personal development. Indeed, Maslow's
ideas surrounding the Hierarchy of Needs concerning the responsibility of
employers to provide a workplace environment that encourages and enables
employees to fulfil their own unique potential (self-actualization) are today
more relevant than ever. Abraham Maslow's book Motivation and Personality,
published in 1954 (second edition 1970) introduced the Hierarchy of Needs, and
Maslow extended his ideas in other work, notably his later book Toward A
Psychology Of Being, a significant and relevant commentary, which has been
revised in recent times by Richard Lowry, who is in his own right a leading
academic in the field of motivational psychology.
Abraham Maslow was born in New York in 1908 and died in 1970, although
various publications appear in Maslow's name in later years. Maslow's PhD in
psychology in 1934 at the University of Wisconsin formed the basis of his
motivational research, initially studying rhesus monkeys. Maslow later moved to
New York's Brooklyn College.
The Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs five-stage model below (structure and
terminology - not the precise pyramid diagram itself) is clearly and directly
attributable to Maslow; later versions of the theory with added motivational
stages are not so clearly attributable to Maslow. These extended models have
instead been inferred by others from Maslow's work. Specifically Maslow refers
to the needs Cognitive, Aesthetic and Transcendence (subsequently shown as
distinct needs levels in some interpretations of his theory) as additional
aspects of motivation, but not as distinct levels in the Hierarchy of Needs.
Where Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs is shown with more than five levels
these models have been extended through interpretation of Maslow's work by
other people. These augmented models and diagrams are shown as the adapted
seven and eight-stage Hierarchy of Needs pyramid diagrams and models below.
There have been very many interpretations of Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs
in the form of pyramid diagrams. The diagrams on this page are my own
interpretations and are not offered as Maslow's original work. Interestingly in
Maslow's book Motivation and Personality, which first introduced the Hierarchy
of Needs, there is not a pyramid to be seen.
Free Hierarchy of Needs diagrams in pdf and doc formats similar to the
image below are available from this page.
(N.B. The word Actualization/Actualisation can be spelt either way. Z is
preferred in American English. S is preferred in UK English. Both forms are
used in this page to enable keyword searching for either spelling via search
engines.)
maslow's hierarchy of needs
Each of us is motivated by needs. Our most basic needs are inborn,
having evolved over tens of thousands of years. Abraham Maslow's Hierarchy of
Needs helps to explain how these needs motivate us all.
Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs states that we must satisfy each need in
turn, starting with the first, which deals with the most obvious needs for
survival itself.
Only when the lower order needs of physical and emotional well-being are
satisfied are we concerned with the higher order needs of influence and personal
development.
Conversely, if the things that satisfy our lower order needs are swept
away, we are no longer concerned about the maintenance of our higher order
needs.
Maslow's original Hierarchy of Needs model was developed between
1943-1954, and first widely published in Motivation and Personality in 1954. At
this time the Hierarchy of Needs model comprised five needs. This original
version remains for most people the definitive Hierarchy of Needs.
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