- Transcendence – Connect To Something Beyond The Ego
- Self-actualization - Find Self-Fulfillment and Reach
One’s Potential
- Aesthetic – Symmetry, Order and Beauty
- Cognitive - Need to Know and Understand
- Esteem – To Achieve, Be Competent, Gain Approval
- Belonging – Affiliate with Others, Be Accepted
- Safety and Security – Out of Danger
- Physiological Needs – Hunger, Thirst, Bodily Needs
Maslow
introduced this set of human needs with a specific eye toward the individual.
He classifies them into two categories: deficiency
needs and growth needs. Deficiency
needs relate to basic requirements to support life while growth needs relate to
the enhancement of the person, and they provide something of a roadmap of just
what enhancement means. This needs
hierarchy gives some clarity to the concept of multi-level selection. In
essence, by invoking stimuli according to the drive afforded by the individual
levels, the efficacy of response is in direct association with multi-level
selection.
On an ongoing
basis, an individual person is subject to this set of needs at all times.
Within our conceptualization, we would posit that these needs are considered,
either directly or indirectly, consciously or subconsciously, with every
interaction entered into by the individual, and further, these needs,
collectively, are also to be found in the impetus for group oriented
interactions as well. This leads to rephrase a question that we discussed
earlier, and ask: “Is there a hierarchy of needs of the group?” In Chapter 1,
we suggested perhaps the opening gambit in forming such a list when we noted
the rather common admonition in both religious and secular groups, “Thou shall
have no other gods before me!” This leads us to also pose a subsequent
question, “Can the group impose its needs upon the individual such that
individual needs can be superseded by group needs?”
Of course, the
needs hierarchy also brings to mind the conveyance mechanism that we talked
about earlier as a parallel to the DNA of biological selection. Perhaps the
hierarchy of needs points us to a higher cognitive evaluation of the brain, a
vector for individual selection. Furthermore, we should now reformulate the
debate on multi-level selection, asking if a hierarchy of needs exists for the
group, or if group selection is based on the combination of individual
hierarchies of needs, and their complex interactions. Additionally, we note
that even if a group hierarchy of needs would be formed, it would still remain
necessary to investigate how it aggregates from individual needs. So perhaps
for the moment we should stay with the individual hierarchy of needs as the
primary guide of selection.
The lowest level
in the hierarchy, physiological needs comprise the basic requirements for human
life to continue. These constitute the primary deficiency needs of a person. Air to breath, water to drink and
food to eat are at the very core of this set of requirements, and essentially
in that order. Failure to satisfy any of these needs can lead to death, with
the urgency of satisfying each being generally relative to the human body’s
physiological needs. A lack of air kills within seconds or minutes. A lack of
water kills in days and a lack of food kills within weeks, if not sooner.
Consequently, when a person is placed within the limits of vulnerability for
these basic, life-sustaining elements then the stimuli from these needs is
likely to overwhelm any other basis for action or interaction. On the other
hand, if these absolutely essential needs are met, then a person might be able
to concentrate on slightly more mundane issues, like avoiding being eaten by a
bear. |