We owe a great debt of gratitude to the pioneering work of
psychologist Abraham Maslow, founder of the school of Humanistic Psychology.
His research set the tone for a new and positive direction in the field of psychology.
Maslow was born and raised in Brooklyn, New York and was the
oldest of 7 children. After high school he attended City College of New York
but dropped out after a year because he hated the curriculum there. In 1927 he
began studies at Cornell University but left after one semester because of poor
grades. He went back to City College, completed his studies there, and then went
on to the University of Wisconsin in 1935 where he got his degree in
psychology. He went to graduate school at Columbia University where he met the
man who would deeply influence him and the future creation of his theories of
human nature, Alfred Adler.
In graduate school Maslow began to question how the field of
psychology came to its conclusions about the human mind and mental illness.
Therefore, in contrast to conventional psychology which solely studied the
mentally ill and created theories of mental illness and pathology based upon
that research, Maslow studied mentally healthy people who were generally happy,
creative, and involved with life. Maslow said that if the field of psychology
only studied and classified mental illnesses, we would continue to have a ‘sick
psychology’. In order for the field of psychology to truly progress and to
understand the full dynamics of the mind and human nature, psychology must also
study creative, fulfilled, and well-adjusted people; those that Maslow referred
to as peak achievers.
Maslow’s research boldly looked at how people develop feelings
of safety, security, love, friendship, intimacy, accomplishment, and
fulfillment. For those who lived life more in this transcendent realm of
consciousness, peak experiences were the most important and most precious
things in their lives. He found that peak achievers noticed the beauty and
sacredness in everyday life more frequently, felt a deep connection with a Higher
power, felt a reverence for the fragility of human nature, experienced more
unconditional love and fewer judgments for themselves and others, and were a
powerful source for manifesting harmony and good will. These attributes created
the foundation for the human potential movement he inspired in the late 50’s
and 60’s.
In 1986, organizational psychologist Marsha Sinetar wrote a
fascinating book based upon the work of Maslow titled, Ordinary People as Monks
and Mystics. Sinetar interviewed hundreds of people and came to the conclusion
that ordinary people, people like you and me, can and do live in ways that
express their highest and most cherished values, values that are the most
prized universally and collectively throughout history.
Abraham Maslow was a trail blazer who taught us that we have
an innate potential for greatness. One of his best books, The Farther Reaches
of Human Nature, created a much needed consciousness and balance within the
field of psychology and was the inspiration for the transpersonal/spiritual
psychology movement in the early 70’s.
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