Skip to main content

Trump’s Hierarchy of Needs


Abraham Maslow, in his Theory of Human Motivation, presented a hierarchy of needs. In there he drew a pyramid divided into five levels of ascending importance. At the very top—the apex of the pyramid—he had the need for self-actualization and transcendence. That, he said, was the last and ultimate human need. 

To the western world, the revelation was nothing short of what Archimedes found in his bathtub and thereafter ran out naked yelling, “Eureka, Eureka”.  That precisely is the reason that a paper written in 1943 is considered relevant and by and large cannot brook any challenge.




I mean a lot more profound versions vis-a-vis this hierarchy of needs were figured out and propounded by hundreds of our thinkers since 3000BCE. But then, west is west. It reinvents, rediscovers, and repackages what is by then common knowledge in India. And gets it patented too. 

For now, however, let’s go with this Maslow pyramid. 

One would expect that a man who is the President of the United States—the most powerful nation in the world—would have reached the top tier, i.e. self-actualisation. This Maslow guy couldn’t think of Nirvana and Moksha of course, limited as he was in his readings. Then there were limited experiences of life too. He seemingly said that the actualisation is when the man realises his potential and gets creative. All very positive. 

However, if Donald Trump realises his full potential by taking creativity to an extreme where he derides and negates everything that the recent election threw up in spite of what the rest of the humanity thinks, I suggest it is creative with a capital ‘C’. He knows he has to go, but his self-actualisation is from getting as troublesome to Joe Biden as possible. 

It is disruption of conventional thinking. Now, Disruption is something that is being touted as a desirable way going forward. Call him a vengeful man. Go ahead, but the idea of systematically defeating every ounce of an adversary's being, is self-actualisation. Eat your heart out, Abraham Maslow; the pyramid you made is pretty much juvenile. 

Says Josh ‘Livestock’ Boruff, “The answer is incredibly simple. It's a matter of choice. It's a matter of weighing the pros and cons and realizing things are simply better if you're vengeful. Vengeance is a lot more than just harming people. It's about empowerment, which is something everybody can appreciate. Plus, the morale boost from defeating an enemy in some form or another is great for self-esteem. Yes, vengeance does a lot of good for a man's spirit.”

 

***

Comments

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Dussehra: A Day for Introspection

Dussehra is a great day to repose your faith in all that is just and ethical. It also makes you rethink your prevarication for aggressive retribution to those who may have truly deserved it. It makes you realise as to how a man of incredible knowledge and immense physical strength can sink into horrendously immoral acts. Ravan had read all Shastra(s) around and developed immense concentration to invoke celestial forces to come to his help. None on Earth was wiser than him.      But then, what to do with a man like that if he displays that he doesn’t know right from wrong? I mean what does Ram Bhagwan do if the ruffian—or, super-pundit, if you so like to describe him—chooses to kidnap his wife? Should he go into a conference with his brother, Laxman, bring the kidnapper’s well-known knowledge, wisdom and certifications from Adiyogi Shiva—no less—into consideration, and thereupon feel sympathetic towards him? Is a wife lost in the deal to be treated as just some collateral ...

GDP Rebound is Inevitable

Sinking GDP and negative growth rates are spooking all of us. The fact that we were expecting the nosedive has not diminished the impact when it has hit us. The problem needs to be addressed with uncommon commitment and a sense of urgency. The crisis is primarily a lagging indicator of two decades of mismanaged economy. Couple that with the Covid19 pandemic and the expensive cross-border tensions with China; and we have a daunting challenge on our hands. GDP is the aggregated value of goods and services produced within a year in the country. That apparently impossible to calculate figure can be arrived by totaling consumption, investment, exports and government expenditure. Government has understandably found their own expenditure a lot easier to handle. It is the domestic products in the other three areas that have shrunk. Drilling down into consumption, investments and exports reveals the underlying causes. It is going to be a hard grind, but we need to focus on agricultural reforms ...

The Vaccine Conundrum

A vaccine developed and ready to be injected in less than one year is a miracle that no research laboratory or pharmaceutical company would have dreamed of before 2020 began. Their track record has been that Jonas Salk’s lightning-fast development of polio vaccine in less than 4 years, and Ebola vaccine was approved in December 2019 after the first Ebola incidence was found in 1976, i.e. more than 40 years after.  From discovery to approved vaccination is a 10-year long process involving 2-5 years of discovery research, 2 years of pre-clinical period, 5 years of clinical development at its very best, 1-2 years of regulatory approval, and then of course comes in the manufacturer. The clinical development period has its 3 phases that is creating the buzz we hear day in and day out these days. Phase I is when researchers concentrate on the question, “Is it safe?” Phase II tries to establish whether the vaccine is activating an immune response or not. Then comes Phase III when they ans...