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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 3 page paper that begins by reporting the levels of Maslow's Hierarch of Needs. The writer then comments on housewives and Maslow's Needs for Belonging and Self-Esteem. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
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3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: MM12_PGhswfm.RTF
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
never self-actualize suddenly commits a crime (just kidding). Women who are housewives by choice may very well reach Maslows higher levels. You could speculate on the lack of women in
the criminal justice system or perhaps on housewives as victims of abuse but these topics dont fulfill your instructions, either. Social needs begin with level 3, belongingness, and Esteem needs
are level 4; Level 2 is Safety needs.] Maslow offered a theory of motivation that has two major categories: deficiency needs and growth needs (Huitt, 2004). Deficiency needs are
those things the individual needs to survive (Huitt, 2004). Once these needs are satisfied an individual becomes interested in growth (Huitt, 2004). Maslow presented his theory in the form of
a pyramid to demonstrate that each need is progressive from the prior (Huitt, 2004). The bottom of the pyramid reflects the physiological needs of hunger, thirst, bodily comforts, etc. (Huitt,
2004). After these needs are met, the individual become driven by the need for security, to be safe from danger (Huitt, 2004). The needs continue up through the need for
belongingness and the need for esteem, (Huitt, 2004). These are the deficiency needs. Moving up the scale, Maslow identified growth needs: cognitive, aesthetic, self-actualization and finally self-transcendence (Huitt, 2004). Maslow
found that self-actualizers looked at the world differently, they were problem-centered by which Maslow meant self-actualizers viewed difficulties in life as problems that demanded solutions (Boeree, 2004). These people also
had a firm grasp of reality, they know what is real and genuine and what is dishonest and fake (Boeree, 2004). Typically, self-actualizers do not believe the ends necessarily justify
the means (Boeree, 2004). Instead, they often feel the journey is what is important, more important then the ends in many instances (Boeree, 2004). Housewives gain a sense of belongingness
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