Humanistic Psychology
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Humanistic Psychology
Humanistic Psychology (HP) emerged in the 1950s–60s as the “third force” in psychology, a deliberate break from behaviorism’s mechanistic control model and psychoanalysis’s pathology fixation. Its origin is inseparable from Abraham Maslow’s post-Pearl Harbor vow to create “a psychology for the peace table”—a science of human nature that could make war obsolete by fostering mutual understanding and self-actualizing persons.[1] At its core, the movement insists that humanity supersedes the sum of his parts[2] and lives with intentionality—creating values, not merely seeking homeostatic satisfaction.[3]
The field was institutionalized with the Journal of Humanistic Psychology (1961) and the American Association for Humanistic Psychology (1962). They forged a research program on self-actualization, B-Values (truth, goodness, beauty, justice, play, etc.), and "synergy," i.e., a social conditions that would fuse selfish and altruistic aims, thereby providing the foundations for what Maslow called the Good Society... Eupsychia, also known Zion (Rastafari), the "New Age" of Aquarius (New Age), Heaven on Earth (Christian), Shambhala (Tibetan), or, most recently, the Good Place.[4]
Philosophically, it revived an Aristotelian essentialism;[5] humanity has an intrinsic nature whose fulfillment is the proper end of life, a doctrine that grounds HP's claim that frustration of needs generates violence, while their gratification builds Eupsychia, a peaceful, psychologically healthy society.
By 1969 the movement naturally extended into Transpersonal Psychology, where we found scientific examination of the transpersonal aspects of Human Nature.
Humanistic psychology is therefore not merely a clinical orientation but a moral-scientific project to re-found civilization on an empirically grounded, dignity-affirming image of Homo sapiens at its most fully human.
Concept Map
Key Terms
Notes
Maslow's Vision
Humanistic Psychology was meant to be revolution. Those that participated in the early days were clear on this. The goal was to create an entirely new foundation for scholarly activity, a new revolution in our understanding of humanity as deep and wide as that provided by the Copernican Revolution.[6] Maslow was a big part of that effort, maybe even an initiating factor. His whole research program beyond 1941 was devoted to bringing about a revolution. We know this because of Maslow's 1941 vision for a Psychology of the Peace Table![7] Experienced the day after Pearl Harbor was bombed, it changed the course of Maslow's life and drove him to create Humanistic Psychology and Transpersonal Psychology, both of which I would argue formed the theoretical foundations (humanistic view of Human Nature,[8] Transpersonal view of Human Potential, for a Eupsychian Psychology devoted to creating the Good Person and the Good Society.[9] A textual representation of his vision is reproduced below.
One day just after Pearl Harbor, I was driving home and my car was stopped by a poor, pathetic parade. Boy Scouts and fat people 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 and war and peace and brotherhood. I was too old to go into the army. It was at that moment that 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.[10]
Maslow's Revolution
Ultimately, the revolution failed, but not because of internal problems, but because it was murdered.[11] It was murdered because it was a threat to the status quo in America and elsewhere. Proponents were talking about revolutionary new ways of seeing humans with revolutionary new potentials to unfold.
promised to heal and awaken, and because it was a credible threat to the
Maslow's Vision
Maslow's
Quotes
Abraham Maslow Index
- Aggridant
- B-Cognition
- B-Needs
- B-Realm
- B-Values
- Being-Guilt
- Big Problem
- D-Cognition
- D-Realm
- Deficiency Diseases
- Diminished Human Being
- Eupsychia
- Eupsychian Education
- Eupsychian Management
- Eupsychian Psychology
- Eupsychian Theory
- Eupsychian Therapy
- Good Chooser
- Good Person
- Good Science
- Good Society
- Good Specimen
- Growing-Tip Statistics
- Hierarchy of Basic Needs
- Hierarchy of Cognitive Needs
- Horticultural Model
- Human Diminution
- Human Motivation
- Human Potential
- Humanistic Psychology
- Inner Signals
- Intrinsic Conscience
- Jonah Complex
- Metapathology
- Motivation
- Normalcy
- Normative Biology
- Peak Experience
- Plateau Experience
- Real Self
- Sculptural Model
- Self-Actualization
- Transcending Self-Actualizers
- Transhumanistic
- Transpersonal Psychology
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Footnotes
- ↑ Sosteric, Mike. “Abraham Maslow’s Vision for a Psychology of the Peace Table.” The Peace Table, 2025. https://medium.com/the-peace-table.
- ↑ Bugental, J. F. “The Third Force in Psychology." Journal of Humanistic Psychology. Journal of Humanistic Psychology 4, no. 1 (1964): 19–26.
- ↑ Charlotte Buhler, “The Scope of Humanistic Psychology.,” Education 95, no. 1 (January 1, 1974): 2–8.
- ↑ Which, in a "funny Hollywood twist haha," was really just a poorly implemented bad place.
- ↑ Robb, “The Hidden Philosophical Agenda: A Commentary on Humanistic Psychology.”
- ↑ Willis W. Harman, “The New Copernican Revolution,” Stanford Today Winter Series II, no. 1 (1969): 127–34.
- ↑ Sosteric, Mike. “Abraham Maslow’s Vision for a Psychology of the Peace Table.” The Peace Table, 2025. https://medium.com/the-peace-table.
- ↑ Maslow, Abraham H. “Science, Psychology, and the Existential Outlook.” In Future Visions: The Unpublished Papers of Abraham Maslow, edited by Edward Hoffman, 115–19. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, 1996.
- ↑ Maslow, Abraham H. “Eupsychia—The Good Society.” Journal of Humanistic Psychology 1, no. 2 (1961): 1.
- ↑ Edward Hoffman, The Right to Be Human: A Biography of Abraham Maslow (New York: McGraw Hill, 1999), p. 148-9.
- ↑ David Elkins, “Why Humanistic Psychology Lost Its Power and Influence in American Psychology,” Journal of Humanistic Psychology 49, no. 1 (2009): 267–91.
