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Drive's Relationship to Needs
Last time, I theorized two types of Drive, internal and external. I withdraw that thought. After further discussion with my sources (okay, it was Aaron again), I came to the conclusion that the internal Drive IS in fact well-shrouded external Drive, as I had feared. This was something of a let-down to me, as I had hoped (perhaps naively) to find that internal Drive was set apart from external Drive, somehow "different" and "special". Perhaps this was a defense mechanism at work, attempting to shield me from responsibility for my own lack of Drive. "I wasn't born with it" would be such an easy way out. Sources of DriveAnyhow, Aaron suggested a few possible sources of Drive: status needs, needfor recognition, need for identity, and so forth. The common thread always seemed to be the word "need". This reminded me of a discussion from high school about Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs. Maslow's HierarchyAbraham Maslow studied human needs and divided them up into categories. He then ordered these categories based on their dependencies. He postulated that a given category of needs could not be addressed until the requirements of all previous categories had been met. Depending on the source, I've heard a number of categories ranging from 5-8. I suspect that Maslow updated his theory once or more, creating multiple "revisions" of it. Maslow's five categories of needs (I've chosen the simplest model for this discussion) were as follows:
These would all seem to be fairly straight-forward except for self-actualization. The idea here is a fulfillment of potential. A self-actualized individual would be constantly learning and growing, as well as accomplishing, and helping others to do the same. Maslow's Hierarchy as a Source of DriveBoth of my formerly-proposed two types of drive can be explained using these categories of needs. Each of my stated sources of external drive is fairly easy to restate in terms of a need: Fear is an expression of worry over one's safety needs. Love helps to fulfil one's belonging and esteem needs. This is pretty easy to see. What's not as easy to see without the context of Maslow's Hierarchy is that even when the external motivator is not as visible, it is still present. A previously inexplicable drive can now be explained in terms of a need. Those that I see as being most applicable to your average person (whose most basic needs are met) are the three higher-level needs, belonging, esteem, and self-actualization.
What Else?This rambling is just an outline of some of my ideas. I think that more of Maslow's eventual 8 levels of needs could work with this idea of drive, and I may explore that option at a later date. Also, more ramblings will follow soon as I explore how Maslow's ideas relate to the ideas of Robert M. Pirsig, inventor (discoverer?) of the Metaphysics of Quality and author of Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance (which I read earlier this year) and Lila (which I'm reading now). Look for something new on that in the next week or two. Here's a teaser, in which I discuss how Maslow's concept of needs and Pirsig's concept of values might interact: "Needs are values. If you need something, it has a high value to you. There are two kinds of values: those that you choose (wants, e.g. your own home, time for recreation, luxury items, etc.), and those that are chosen for you (needs, e.g. food, oxygen, water, etc.)" Until next time, in the words of Jack Horkheimer, "Keep looking up!" -DeThroneD |
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