
Maslow,
and his amazing work.
Part One/ AKA: How to spot one of THEM, US, YOU, in a crowd!
Of all the philosophers and Psycologists I have been exposed
to, I think AH Maslow has probably been my greatest influence.
His work could easily be called "a dummy's guide to an exciting
life". Because his writing is simple, easy to follow, and
based on experiental truth. His two greatest works, and certainly
the ones that have influenced me the most, are:
Religions, Values, and Peak-Experiences and
The Farther Reaches Of Human Nature
In 'The Farther Reaches Of Human Nature' Maslow lays out a series
of guidlines for the modern day "peak experiencer",
(if you are un familiar with that term please read the previously
posted article, Section 2: Some thoughts on the travelogue of
life.)
I should point out that I read these guidlines long after I decided
to make "Aliveness" the SBG mantra. But, that is one
of the reasons I found them so profound. If you are seeking absolute
truth through experiental learning, then the dialouge, terminology,
and landmarks, become similar.
This is true whether you are using Science, Art, Poetry, Philosophy,
Religion, or in our case Aliveness against resisting opponents.
Here is an excerpt from this great work, and the first five 'New
Values':
- Truth: honesty;
reality; (nakedness; simplicity; richness; [MA 134] essentiality;
oughtness; beauty; pure; clean and unadulterated completeness).
- Goodness: (rightness;
desirability; oughtness; justice; benevolence; honesty); (we
love it, are attracted to it, approve of it).
- Beauty: (rightness;
form; aliveness; simplicity; richness; wholeness, perfection;
completion; uniqueness; honesty).
- Wholeness: (unity;
integration; tendency to oneness; interconnectedness; simplicity;
organization; structure; order, not dissociated;synergy; homonymous
and integrative tendencies).
4a. Dichotomy-transcendence:
(acceptance, resolution, integration, or transcendence of dichotomies,
polarities, opposites, contradictions);synergy (i.e., transformation
of oppositions into unities, of antagonists into collaborating
or mutually enhancing partners).
- Aliveness: (process;
not-deadness; spontaneity; self-regulation; full-functioning;
changing and yet remaining the same; expressing itself).
What are common denominators of people 'living' these values?
Or how to spot THOSE, US,
YOU bastards!
1. For the transcenders, peak experiences and plateau
experiences become the most important things in their lives, the
high spots,the validators of life, the most precious aspect of
life.
2. They (the transcenders) speak easily, normally, naturally,
and unconsciously the language of Being (B-language), the language
of poets, of mystics, of seers, of profoundly religious men, of
men who live at the Platonic-idea level or at the Spinozistic
level, under the aspect of eternity. Therefore, they
should better understand parables, figures of speech, paradoxes,
music, art, nonverbal communications, etc. (This is an easily
testable proposition.)
3. They perceive unitively or sacrally (i.e., the sacred
within the secular), or they see the sacredness in all things
at the same time that they also see them at the practical, everyday
D-level. They can sacralize everything at will; i.e., perceive
it under the aspect of eternity. This ability is in addition
to -- not mutually exclusive with -- good [MA 287] reality testing
within the D-realm. (This is well described by the Zen notion
of “nothing special.”)
4. They are much more consciously and deliberately metamotivated.
That is, the values of Being, or Being itself seen both as fact
and value,e.g., perfection, truth, beauty, goodness, unity, dichotomy-transcendence,
B-amusement, etc. are their main or most important motivations.
5. They seem somehow to recognize each other, and to come
to almost instant intimacy and mutual understanding even upon
first meeting. They can then communicate not only in
all the verbal ways but also in the nonverbal ways as well.
6. They are more responsive to beauty. This may
turn out to be rather a tendency to beautify all things, including
all the B-Values, or to see the beautiful more easily than others
do, or to have aesthetic responses more easily than other people
do, or to consider beauty mostimportant, or to see as beautiful
what is not officially or conventionally beautiful. (This is confusing,
but it is the best I can do at this time.)
7. They are more holistic about the world than are the
“healthy” or practical self-actualizers (who are also
holistic in this same sense). Mankind is one and the
cosmos is one, and such concepts as the “national interest”
or “the religion of my fathers” or “different
grades of people or of IQ” either cease to exist or are
easily transcended. If we accept as the ultimate political necessities
(as well as today the most urgent ones), to think of all men as
brothers, to think of national sovereignties (the right to make
war) as a form of stupidity or immaturity, then transcenders think
this way more easily, more reflexively, more naturally. Thinking
in our “normal” stupid or immature way is for them
an effort, even thoughthey can do it.
8. Overlapping this statement of holistic perceiving is
a strengthening of the self-actualizer’s natural tendency
to synergy -- intrapsychic, interpersonal, intraculturally and
internationally. This cannot be spelled out fully here
because that would take too long. A brief -- and perhaps not very
meaningful -- statement is that synergy transcends the dichotomy
between selfishness and unselfishness and includes them both under
a single superordinate concept. It is a transcendence of competitiveness,
of zero-sum of win-lose gamesmanship. [MA 288]
9. Of course there is more and easier transcendence of
the ego, the Self, the identity.
10. Not only are such people lovable as are all of the
most self-actualizing people, but they are also more awe-inspiring,
more “unearthly,” more godlike, more “saintly”
in the medieval sense, more easily revered, more “terrible”
in the older sense. They have more often produced in
me the thought, “This is a great man.”
11. As one consequence of all these characteristics, the
transcenders are far more apt to be innovators, discovers of the
new, than are thehealthy self-actualizers, who are rather apt
to do a very good job of what has to be done “in the world.”
Transcendent experiences andilluminations bring clearer vision
of the B-Values, of the ideal, of the perfect, of what ought to
be, what actually could be, what exists in potentia -- and therefore
of what might be brought to pass.
12. I have a vague impression that the transcenders are
less “happy” than the healthy ones. They can be more
ecstatic, more rapturous, and experience greater heights of “happiness”
(a too weak word) than the happy and healthy ones. But
I sometimes get the impression that they are as prone and maybe
more prone to a kind of cosmic-sadness or B-sadness over the stupidity
of people, their self-defeat, their blindness, their cruelty to
each other, their shortsightedness. Perhaps this comes from the
contrast between what actually is and the ideal world that the
transcenders can see so easily and so vividly, and which is in
principle so easily attainable. Perhaps this is a price these
people have to pay for their direct seeing of the beauty of the
world, of the saintly possibilities in human nature, of the non-necessity
of so much of human evil, of the seemingly obvious necessities
for a good world; e.g., a world government, synergic social institutions,
education for human goodness rather than for higher IQs or greater
expertness at some atomistic job, etc. Any transcender could sit
down and in five minutes write a recipefor peace, brotherhood,
and happiness, a recipe absolutely within the bounds of practicality,
absolutely attainable. And yet he sees all this not being done;
or where it is being done, then so slowly that the holocausts
may come first. No wonder he is sad or angry or impatient at the
same time that he is also “optimistic” in the long
run. [MA 289]
13. The deep conflicts over the “elitism”
that is inherent in any doctrine of self-actualization -- they
are after all superior people whenever comparisons are made --
is more easily solved -- or at least managed -- by the transcenders
than by the merely healthy self-actualizers. This is
made possible because they can more easily live in both the D-
and B-realms simultaneously, they can sacralize everybody so much
more easily. This means that they can reconcile more easily the
absolute necessity for some form of reality-testing, comparing,
elitism in the D-world (you must pick a good carpenter for the
job, not a poor carpenter; you must make some distinction between
the criminal and the policeman, the sick man and the physician,
the honest man and the fake, the intelligent man and the stupid
one) on the one hand, and on the other hand, the transfinite and
equal, noncomparable sacredness of everybody. In a very empirical
and necessary sense, Carl Rogers talks about the “unconditional
positive regard” that is a priori necessary for effective
psychotherapy. Our laws forbid “cruel and unusual”
punishment; i.e., no matter what crime a man has committed, he
must be treated with a dignity not reducible below a certain point.
Seriously religious theists say that “each and every person
is a child of God.” This sacredness of every person and
even of every living thing, even of nonliving things that are
beautiful, etc. is so easily and directly perceived in its reality
by every transcender that he can hardly forget it for a moment.
Fused with his highly superior reality-testing of the D-realm,
he could be the godlike punisher, the comparer, noncontemptuous,
never the exploiter of weakness, stupidity, or incapability even
while he realistically recognized these gradable qualities in
the D-world. The way of phrasing this paradox that I have found
useful for myselfis this: The factually-superior transcending
selfactualizer acts always to the factually-inferior person as
to a brother, a member of the family who must be loved and cared
for no matter what he does because he is after all a member of
the family. But he can still act as a stern father or older
brother, and not only as an all-forgiving mother or motherly father.
This punishment is quite compatible with godlike transfinite love.
From a transcendent point of view, it is easy to see that even
for the good of the transgressor himself it may be better to punish
him, frustrate him, to say “No,” rather than to gratify
him or please him now. [MA 290]
14. My strong impression is that transcenders show more
strongly a positive correlation -- rather than the more usual
inverse one -- between increasing knowledge and increasing mystery
and awe. Certainly by most people scientific knowledge
is taken as a lessener of mystery and therefore of fear, since
for most people mystery breeds fear. One then pursues knowledge
as an anxiety-reducer. But for Peak-experiencers and transcenders
in particular, as well as for self-actualizers in general, mystery
is attractive and challenging rather than frightening. The self-actualizer
is somewhat apt to be bored by what is well known, however useful
this knowledge may be. But this is especially so for the peaker
for whom the sense of mystery of reverence and of awe is a reward
rather than a punishment.In any case, I have found in the most
creative scientists I have talked with that the more they know,
the more apt they are to go into an ecstasy in which humility,
a sense of ignorance, a feeling of smallness, awe before the tremendousness
of the universe, or the stunningness of a hummingbird, or the
mystery of a baby are all a part, and are all felt subjectively
in a positive way, as a reward.Hence the humility and self-confessed
“ignorance” and yet also the happiness of the great
transcender-scientist. I think it a possibility that we all have
such experiences, especially as children, and yet it is the transcender
who seems to have them more often, more profoundly, and values
them most as high moments in life. This statement is meant to
include both scientists and mystics as well as poets, artists,industrialists,
politicians, mothers, and many other kinds of people. And in any
case, I affirm as a theory of cognition and of science (fortesting)
that at the highest levels of development of humanness, knowledge
is positively rather than negatively correlated with a sense of
mystery, awe, humility, ultimate ignorance, reverence, and a sense
of oblation.
15. Transcenders, I think, should be less afraid of “nuts”
and “kooks” than are other self-actualizers, and thus
are more likely to be goodselectors of creators (who sometimes
look nutty or kooky). I would guess that self-actualizers would
generally value creativeness more and therefore select it more
efficiently (and therefore should make the best personnel managers
or selectors or counselors) and yet to value a William Blake type
takes, in principle, a greater experience with transcendence and
therefore a greater valuation of it. Something like [MA
291] this should be true at the opposite pole: A transcender should
also be more able to screen out the nuts and kooks who are not
creative, which I suppose includes most of them. I have no experience
to report here. This follows from theory and is presented as an
easily testable hypothesis.
16. It follows from theory that transcenders should be
more “reconciled with evil” in the sense of understanding
its occasional inevitability and necessity in the larger holistic
sense, i.e., “from above,” in a godlike or Olympian
sense. Since this implies a better understanding of it,
it should generate both a greater compassion with it and a less
ambivalent and a more unyielding fight against it. This sounds
like a paradox, but with a little thought can be seen as not at
all self-contradictory. To understand more deeply means, at this
level, to have a stronger arm (not a weaker one), to be more decisive,
to have less conflict, ambivalence, regret, and thus to act more
swiftly, surely and effectively. One can compassionately strike
down the evil man if this is necessary.
17. I would expect another paradox to be found in transcenders:
namely, that they are more apt to regard themselves as carriers
of talent, instruments of the transpersonal, temporary custodians
so to speak of a greater intelligence or skill or leadership or
efficiency. This means a certain peculiar kind of objectivity
or detachment toward themselves that to nontranscenders might
sound like arrogance, grandiosity, or even paranoia. The example
I find most useful here is the attitude of the pregnant mother
toward herself and her unborn child. What is self? What is not?
How demanding, self-admiring, arrogant does she have a right to
be? I think we would be just as startled by the judgment, “I
am the best one for his job and therefore I demand it,”
as by the equally probable judgment, “You are the best one
for this job and therefore it is your duty to take it away from
me.” Transcendence brings with it the “transpersonal”
loss of ego.
18. Transcenders are in principle (I have no data) more
apt to be profoundly “religious” or “spiritual”
in either the theistic or nontheistic sense. Peak experiences
and other transcendent experiences are in effect also to be seen
as “religious or spiritual” experiences if only we
redefine these terms to exclude their historical, conventional,
superstitious, institutional accretions of meaning. Such experiences
[MA 292] can indeed be seen as “antireligious” from
the merely conventional point of view or as religion-surrogates,
or religion-replacements or as a “new version of what used
to be called religion or spirituality.” The paradox that
some atheists are far more “religious” than some priests
can be easily enough tested and thus given operational meaning.
19. Perhaps another quantitative difference that may show
up between these two kinds of self-actualizers -- I am not at
all sure of it -- is that the transcenders, I suspect, find it
easier to transcend the ego, the self, the identity, to go beyond
self-actualization. To sharpen what I think I see: Perhaps
we could say that the description of the healthy ones is more
exhausted by describing them primarily as strong identities, people
who know who they are, where they are going, what they want, what
they are good for, in a word, as strong Selves, using themselves
well and authentically and in accordance with their own true nature.
And this of course does not sufficiently describe the transcenders.
They are certainly this; but they are also more than this.
20. I would suppose -- again as an impression and without
specific data -- that transcenders, because of their easier perception
of the B-realm, would have more end experiences (of suchness)
than their more practical brothers do, more of the fascinations
that we see in children who get hypnotized by the colors in a
puddle, or by raindrops dripping down a windowpane, or by the
smoothness of skin, or the movements of a caterpillar.
21. In theory, transcenders should be somewhat more Taoistic,
and the merely healthy somewhat more pragmatic. B-cognition makeseverything
look more miraculous, more perfect, just as it should be.
It therefore breeds less impulse to do anything to the object
that is fine just as it is, less needing improvement, or intruding
upon. There should then be more impulse simply to stare at it
and examine it than to do anything about it or with it.
22. A concept that adds nothing new but which ties all
the foregoing in with the whole rich structure of Freudian Theory
is the word“postambivalent” that I think tends to
be more characteristic of all self-actualizers and may turn out
to be a little more so in some transcenders. It means
total wholehearted and unconflicted love, [MA 293] acceptance,
expressiveness, rather than the more usual mixture of love and
hate that passes for “love” or friendship or sexuality
or authority or power, etc.
23. Finally I call attention to the question of “levels
of pay” and “kinds of pay” even though I am
not sure that my two groups differ much, if at all, in this regard.
What is crucially important is the fact itself that there are
many kinds of pay other than money pay, that money as such steadily
recedes in importance with increasing affluence and with increasing
maturity of character, while higher forms of pay and metapay steadily
increase in importance. Furthermore, even where money pay continues
to seem to be important, it is often so not in its own literal,
concrete character, but rather as a symbol for status, success,
self-esteem with which to win love, admiration, and respect. I
assume that greater psychological health would make these kinds
of pay more valuable especially with sufficient money and with
money held constant as a variable. Of course, a large proportion
of selfactualizing people have probably fused work and play anyway:
i.e., they love their work. Of them, one could say, they get paid
for what they would do as a hobby anyway, for doing work that
is intrinsically satisfying. The only difference I can think of,
that further investigation may turn up between my two groups,
is that the transcenders may actively [MA 294] seek out jobs that
make peak experiences and B-cognition more likely. One reason
for mentioning this in this context is my conviction that it is
a theoretical necessity in planning the Eupsychia, the good society,
that leadership must be separated from privilege, exploitation,
possessions, luxury, status, power-over-other-people, etc. The
only way that I can see to protect the more capable, the leaders
and managers from ressentiment, from the impotent envy of the
weak, of the underprivileged, of the less capable, of those who
need to be helped, i.e., from the Evil Eye, from overturn by the
underdog, is to pay them, not with more money but with less, to
pay them rather with “higher pay” and with“metapay.”
It follows from the principles so far set forth here and elsewhere
that this would please both the selfactualizers and the lesspsychologically
developed, and would abort the development of the mutually exclusive
and antagonistic classes or castes that we have seen throughout
human history. All we need to do to make practical this post-Marxian,
post-historical possibility is to learn not to pay too much for
money, i.e., to value the higher rather than the lower. Also it
would be necessary here to desymbolize money; i.e., it must not
symbolize success, respectworthiness, or loveworthiness.These
changes should in principle be quite easily possible since they
already accord with the preconscious or not-quite-conscious value-life
of self-actualizing people. Whether or not this Weltanschauung
is or is not more characteristic of transcenders remains to be
discovered. I suspect so, mostly on the grounds that mystics and
transcenders have throughout history seemed spontaneously to prefer
simplicity and to avoid luxury, privilege, honors, and possessions.
My impression is that the “common people” have therefore
mostly tended to love andrevere them rather than to fear and hate
them. So perhaps this could be a help in designing a world in
which the most capable, the most awakened, the most idealistic
would be chosen and loved as leaders, as teachers, as obviously
benevolent and unselfish authority.
24. I cannot resist expressing what is only a vague hunch;
namely, the possibility that my transcenders seem to me somewhat
more apt to be Sheldonian ectomorphs while my less-often-transcending
selfactualizers seem more often to be mesomorphic. (I
mention this only because itis in principle easily testable.)
[MA 295] Epilogue
Because it will be so difficult for so many to believe, [I don’t
believe it, for one! It seems wishful thinking. See also MA 314
and 327] I must state explicitly that I have found approximately
as many transcenders among businessmen, industrialists, managers,
educators, political people as I have among the professionally
“religious,” the poets, intellectuals, musicians,
and others who are supposed to be transcenders and are officially
labeled so. I must say that each of these “professions”
has different folkways, different jargon, different personae,
and different uniforms. Any minister will talk transcendence even
if he hasn’t got the slightest inkling of what it feels
like. And most industrialists will carefully conceal their idealism,
their metamotivations, and their transcendent experiences under
a mask of “toughness,” “realism,” “selfishness,”
and all sorts of other words which would have to be marked off
by quotes to indicate that they are only superficial and defensive.
Their more real metamotivations are often not repressed but only
suppressed, and I have sometimes found it quite easy to break
through the protective surface by very direct confrontations and
questions.
I must be careful also not to give any false impressions about
numbers of subjects (only three or four dozen who have been more
or lesscarefully talked with and observed, and perhaps another
hundred or two talked with, read, and observed but not as carefully
or in depth), orabout the reliability of my information (this
is all exploration or investigation or reconnaissance rather than
careful final research, a first approximation rather than the
normally verified science which will come later), or the representativeness
of my sample (I used whomever I could get, but mostly concentrated
on the best specimens of intellect, creativeness, character, strength,
success, etc.).
Very important today in a topical sense is the realization that
plateau experiencing can be achieved, learned, earned by long
hard work. It can be meaningfully aspired to. But I don’t
know of any way of bypassing the necessary maturing, experiencing,
living, learning. All of this takes time. A transient glimpse
is certainly possible in the peak experiences which may, after
all, come sometimes to anyone. But, so to speak, to take up residence
on the high plateau of Unitive consciousness, that is another
matter altogether. That tends to be a lifelong effort.It should
not be confused with the Thursday evening turn-on that many youngsters
think of as the path to transcendence. For that matter, it should
not be confused with any single experience. The “spiritual
disciplines,” both the classical ones and the new ones that
keep on being discovered these days, all take time, work, discipline,
study, commitment.
-AH Maslow
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