Wednesday, November 4, 2020

Nominees for Highly Actualized Documentary Subjects

Nominees

Barbara Clark

Cathy Manulkin

Pat Berberich

Greta Pruitt

Jim Douglas

John Meyers

Greta Pruitt

Dalai Llama  

Richard Feynman
Charles Thomas
Abraham Maslow
Liz Cooley
Patricia Vining


Nominated by Patricia Vining

Amanda Vining

Leandra Kalt

Nino

Reed

Ron Cohan

Virginia

Tom


2024 Nominees

Vince McCollugh

Annia Orendain Gomez  (#2011)

Charles Thomas

Frankie Thomas

 

Historical nominees

Mahatma Ghandi

Mother Theresa






Questions:


Maslow, in his own words on YouTube


Awareness & Peak Experience 






Maslow Quotes: 

“An experience of perfection will produce a peak experience."

"The higher the level of psychological the greater the frequency of peak experiences. The higher they reach, the more intense, the more illuminated, the more cognitive they are... the more you learn from them."


"




Notes on Maslow....

Maslow Bio:   http://pws.cablespeed.com/~htstein/hoff2.htm



While teaching at Brandeis near Boston he wrote in Motivation and Personality: 

”The science of psychology has been far more successful on the negative than on the positive side... It has revealed to us much about man's shortcomings, his illnesses, his sins, but little about his potentialities, his virtues, his achievable aspirations or his psychological health. It is as if psychology had voluntarily restricted itself to only half its rightful jurisdiction.... We must find out what psychology... might be, if it could free itself from the stultifying effects of limited, pessimistic and stingy preoccupations with human nature." http://pws.cablespeed.com/~htstein/hoff2.htm

In 1938, at the behest of his friends Ruth Benedict and Margaret Mead, both anthropologists at Columbia University, Maslow conducted field work among Canada's Blackfoot Indians. The experience convinced him that we can learn much from studying the daily lives of people in other cultures. It also convinced him that people around the world are far more alike than they are different, and that we all share certain inborn needs and drives.  These conclusions began to guide his research on emotional security as a trait that has a profound impact on our social relations.


see Edward Hoffman, Ph.D., is a New York City psychologist and author of The Right to Be Human: A Biography of Abraham Maslow, recently published by Tarcher/St. Martin's Press. 


Peak experiences,  feelings of limitless horizons...


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https://www.thepositiveencourager.global/abraham-maslows-approach-to-doing-positive-work/

“And they were angels, my professors. I’ve always had angels around. They helped me when I needed it, even fed me. --maslow


Behaviourism and Psychoanalysis were then the predominant psychological models. Maslow would later, of course, help to give birth to the ‘Third Force’ – humanistic psychology. Whilst at Wisconsin, however, his doctorate focused on dominance and sexuality in monkeys.


Maslow also believed that human beings were living systems that strove towards fulfilling their potential. At this time, however, the world was in chaos and America joined World War II.

He was too old to join-up, but one incident set the direction for his future life. Abe told Edward Hoffman:

“I felt I must try to save the world, and to prevent the horrible wars and the awful hatred and prejudice. It happened very suddenly.

“One day just after Pearl Harbor, I was driving home and my car was stopped by a poor, pathetic parade. Boy Scouts and old uniforms and a flag and someone playing a flute off-key.

“As I watched, the tears began to run down my face. I felt we didn’t understand – not Hitler, nor the Germans, nor Stalin, nor the Communists.

“We didn’t understand any of them. I felt that if we could understand, then we could make progress.

“I had a vision of a peace table, with people sitting around it, talking about human nature and hatred, war and peace, and brotherhood.”

“I was too old to go into the army. It was at that moment I realized that the rest of my life must be devoted to discovering a psychology for the peace table. That moment changed my whole life.

“Since then, I’ve devoted myself to developing a theory of human nature that could be tested by experiment and research.

“I wanted to prove that humans are capable of something grander than war, prejudice, and hatred.

“I wanted to make science consider all the people: the best specimen of mankind I could find. I found that many of them reported having something like mystical experiences.”



People can explore the further reaches of human nature

Abe was fascinated by ‘self-actualisers’ who used their talents to help other people. (There are obviously – and unfortunately – some people who get their ‘highs’ by hurting others.)

Maslow studied people who, in the broadest sense, were committed to ‘doing good’.

These included, for example, Abraham Lincoln, Jane Adams and Eleanor Roosevelt. So how did such people achieve peak experiences? George Boeree outlines these in his excellent overview at:




George Boeree

Self-actualisers demonstrated
some of the following characteristics

They followed their values. They were ‘real’ – being true to themselves rather than ‘fake’. They had a strong sense of autonomy and resisted pressure to conform.

They found solutions – treating life’s-problems as challenges to be solved. They frequently saw the ‘means’ – the journey – as being as important as the ‘ends’.

They enjoyed solitude and preferred to have deep relationships with a few people. They also had a positive sense of humour, rather than laughing at others misfortunes.

They accepted themselves and, within limits, other people. At the same time, they wanted to improve themselves if they saw the benefits.

They had a strong sense of respect towards others. Maslow called this quality ‘human kinship’.

They believed in certain values – and were prepared to ‘fight’ for them – but also appreciated and enjoyed differences in others. They were prepared to draw the line, however, if people did not show respect to others or certain values.

They had strong ethics. These were often ‘spiritual’ in nature, rather than ‘religious’.

They had the ability to be creative, imaginative and original. They had a sense of wonder – a ‘freshness of appreciation’ – which stretched to seeing the extraordinary in ordinary things.

They had more peak experiences than most people. Such experiences sometimes gave them a sense of transcendence.

George Boeree added:

“Maslow doesn’t think that self-actualizers are perfect, of course.  There were several flaws or imperfections he discovered along the way as well:

“First, they often suffered considerable anxiety and guilt – but realistic anxiety and guilt, rather than misplaced or neurotic versions.

“Some of them were absentminded and overly kind.  And finally, some of them had unexpected moments of ruthlessness, surgical coldness, and loss of humor.”

“Two other points he makes about these self-actualizers:  Their values were ‘natural’ and seemed to flow effortlessly from their personalities.

“And they appeared to transcend many of the dichotomies others accept as being undeniable, such as the differences between the spiritual and the physical, the selfish and the unselfish, and the masculine and the feminine.”

Boeree explains that Maslow believed self-actualisers needed certain qualities in their lives to be happy. These included: truth, honesty, beauty, unity, aliveness, uniqueness, perfection, completion, justice, simplicity, playfulness, self-sufficiency and meaningfulness.

Boeree says that Maslow recognised that everybody might crave for these needs.

He points out, however, that if a person does not have enough to eat or has nowhere to live, those needs take precedence.

Self-actualisers were in the more fortunate position of being able to focus on their higher needs. They were able to explore the further reaches of human nature.


There are several books about Maslow. Edward Hoffman wrote a biography The Right To Be Human. Whilst Frank Goble wrote an excellent portrayal of Maslow’s influence called The Third Force.

Maslow's pioneering studies of women's sexuality preceded Alfred Kinsey's famous sexological studies by several years, and influenced Kinsey and others. "I thought that working on sex was the easiest way to help mankind," Maslow later recalled. "If I could discover a way to improve the sexual life by even 1 percent, then I could improve the whole species."


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