Motivation and Maslow

Lecture 4 – Motivation and Maslow

Let’s talk about what drives people — motives, needs, goals — basically why we do what we do.

What is a Motive?

A motive is a psychological push or pull. It moves us toward something we want or away from something we don’t. Think of it as energy aimed at a goal.

  • Need = something essential (e.g., food, safety)
  • Motive = a general internal drive
  • Goal = the endpoint of that drive

These words are used interchangeably, but the concept is the same: we’re driven beings.

Layers of Human Motivation

Humans operate with motives at different levels:

  • Basic: e.g. grasping, suckling, food
  • Psychological: e.g. competence, belonging
  • Transcendent: e.g. self-actualization, enlightenment

We juggle all these levels at once — we’re not simple.

Classic Theories of Motivation

Henry Murray

  • Created a long list of psychological needs (e.g. n Achievement, n Power, n Affiliation)
  • Combined psychoanalysis and literature
  • Worked under MKUltra — dark history, but influential

McClelland’s Big Three Motives

  1. Achievement – Desire to be competent, to master skills
  2. Affiliation – Need for intimacy, belonging, connection
  3. Power – Drive to influence or shape others (can be positive or negative)

Self-Determination Theory (Deci & Ryan)

  1. Competence – Desire to feel effective
  2. Relatedness – Desire to feel connected
  3. Autonomy – Desire to feel in control of one’s own actions

Three Big Splits in Motivation

1. Approach vs. Avoidance

  • Approach = chasing the cheese (dopaminergic, optimistic)
  • Avoidance = running from the hawk (fear, adrenaline)

2. Intrinsic vs. Extrinsic

  • Intrinsic = you do it for joy
  • Extrinsic = you do it for a reward or punishment

Classic study: kids who loved drawing drew less when they were rewarded for it.

3. Explicit vs. Implicit

  • Explicit = conscious motives
  • Implicit = unconscious drives (Freudian, TAT tests, projective stories)

Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs

Maslow never drew a pyramid — that was later. But the hierarchy matters.

1. Physiological Needs

  • Food, water, oxygen, salt balance, etc.
  • Unconscious, homeostatic, like a thermostat (test-operate-test-exit)

2. Safety Needs

  • Stability in one’s environment (especially in childhood)
  • Routine, predictability, protection from chaos

3. Love/Belonging Needs

  • Friendship, intimacy, community, attachment
  • Also called: Relatedness, Affiliation, Connection

4. Esteem Needs

  • Desire to feel competent and respected by others
  • Self-esteem rooted in real achievement (not narcissism)
  • Similar to: Competence, Achievement motive

5. Self-Actualization

  • “What a man can be, he must be.”
  • Becoming who you were meant to be — fulfilling your unique potential
  • Artists paint, musicians make music, writers write — not for reward, but because they must

6. Self-Transcendence (Maslow’s later addition)

  • Going beyond the self
  • Living as an end in itself, not a means
  • Relating to others, nature, the cosmos
  • Often shows up as peak experiences or flow states

“Man is a perpetually wanting animal.” – Maslow


Flow States (Csikszentmihalyi)

  • Optimal experience when challenge = skill
  • Examples: climbing, sports, music, writing
  • You lose yourself in the task
  • Growth follows the flow channel: you constantly raise the challenge to stay engaged

Happiness & Motivation

According to Sonja Lyubomirsky:

“Happiness = joy, contentment, or positive well-being + a sense that life is meaningful and worthwhile.”

Three Types of Happiness:

  1. Hedonia – pleasure, satisfaction, comfort
  2. Eudaimonia – meaning, purpose, higher self
  3. Richness – deep experiences, variety, story-worthy life

Final Thoughts

  • Motivation is complex — we juggle basic drives, social needs, higher goals, and transcendent aspirations
  • Intrinsic motivation creates joy, but can be crushed by too much external reward
  • Happiness is more than just feeling good — it’s about meaning and depth
  • To truly transcend, sometimes we need to stop thinking so much, and just live
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