| hierarchy of needs definitions |
| # | Definition | Sets |
| 1 | maslow's pyramid of human needs, beginning at the base with physiological needs that must first be satisfied before higher-level safety needs and then psychological needs become active | 19 sets |
| 2 | maslow's theory of the most important motivations people have | 9 sets |
| 3 | humanism; marlow; graduation of primitive motives to more sophisticated, complex (human needs); higher motives only emerge after basic are fulfilled; stages-physiological, safety, belonging/love (sometimes a separate stage), esteem, and self-actualization | 6 sets |
| 4 | maslow's pyramid of human needs, beginning at the base with physiological needs that must first be satisfied before higher-level safety needs and then psychological needs become active. | 6 sets |
| 5 | maslow's pyramid of human needs, beginning at the base with physiological needs that must first be satisfied before higher-level safety needs and then psychological needs become active. (myers psychology 8e p. 472) | 5 sets |
| 6 | maslow's theory of motivation which states that we must achieve lower level needs, such as food, shelter, and safety before we can achieve higher level needs, such as belonging, esteem, and self-actualization. | 3 sets |
| 7 | maslow's pyramid of human needs; at the base are physiological needs that must be satisfied before higher-level safety needs, and then psychological needs, become active. | 3 sets |
| 8 | an arrangement of human needs in a pyramid with physical needs at the base and self-actualization at the top. | 2 sets |
| 9 | maslow's ______________ proposes that huÂman motives may be ranked from the basic, physÂiological level through higher-level needs for safety, love, esteem, and self-actualization; until they are satisfied, the more basic needs are more compelling than the higher-level ones. (p. 337) | 2 sets |
| 10 | system that ranks needs one above the other with the most basic needs at the bottom of the sequence | 2 sets |
| 11 | which describes the order in which people seek to satisfy their desires | 2 sets |
| 12 | mazlow's pyramid of human needs, beginning at the base with physiological needs that must first be satisfied before higher-level safety needs and the psychological needs become active | 2 sets |
| 13 | maslow's pyramid of human needs, beginning at the base with physiological needs that must first be satisfied before higher-level safety needs and then psychologicaln needs become active | 2 sets |
| 14 | the order in which a person's basic needs must be met | 2 sets |
| 15 | maslow | 2 sets |
| 16 | maslow's idea that some needs like eating must be first satisfied by the body before lesser needs are. | 1 set |
| 17 | maslow's view that basic human motives form a hierarchy and that the needs at each level must be satisfied before the next level can be achieved; these needs range from basic biological needs to the needs for self-actualization | 1 set |
| 18 | needs that are arranged in a specific order or rank, sequential arrangement. associated with abraham maslow | 1 set |
| 19 | ranked list of those needs essential to humans growth and development, presented in ascending order, starting with basic needs and building toward the need for reaching your highest potential | 1 set |
| 20 | a list of needs that are essential to human growth and development | 1 set |
| 21 | a theory of motivation advanced by maslow holding that higher order motives involving social and personal growth only emerge after lower level motives related to survival have been satisfied | 1 set |
| 22 | ranking of human necessities from basic food to self-actualization, proposed by abraham maslow. | 1 set |
| 23 | a ranked list of human growth and development. | 1 set |
| 24 | ranked list of those needs essential to human growth and development presented in ascending order from the most basic to the most fulfilling or satisfying | 1 set |
| 25 | physiological, safety, belonging, esteem, self actualization | 1 set |
| 26 | a proposal (abraham maslow) that arranges motives in an order in which those lower in the hierarchy must be satisfied before the higher ones can be satisfied. the lower motives are considered to be food, shelter, and so on, progressing to "self-actualization" as the motive highest in the hierarchy. | 1 set |
| 27 | maslow's proposed basic physical necessities must be satisfied before higher-growth needs) | 1 set |
| 28 | maslow's pyramid of human needs:physiological, safety, belonging and love, esteem, self actualization | 1 set |
| 29 | a theoretical model of five needs that maslow believed every human had; the needs range from basic physiological and safety needs, to love and belongingness needs, to esteem, and finally at the top of the hierarchy to the need for self-actualization, | 1 set |
| 30 | a theorectical model of five needs that maslow believed every human had, the needs range from basic physiological and safety needs, to love and belong, esteem, and finally at the top of the hierarchy to the need for self-actualization | 1 set |
| 31 | ascending from the basical biological needs to the complex psychological motivations that become important only after the basic needs have been satisfied | 1 set |
| 32 | when human needs are ranked one above the other from the most basic at the bottom this ranking | 1 set |
| 33 | maslow's concept that there is an order to human needs which starts with basic biological needs and progresses to self-actualization | 1 set |
| 34 | maslow's pyramid of human needs, beginning at the base with physiological needs that must first be satisfied before higher level safety needs and the psychological needs become active. | 1 set |
| 35 | on this hierarchy or ladder needs ranked by their importance to the individuals survival | 1 set |
| 36 | maslow's idea of a pyramid of human needs; physiological needs (ex. hunger) must first be satisfied, then safety needs (ex. security), then belonging needs (ex. love), then esteem needs (ex. respect), and last is self-actualization needs (ex. achieving big goals); some motives are more compelling than others | 1 set |
| 37 | according to maslow, humans have certain needs that must be fulfilled for healthy living. these needs motivate us to act the way we do, and in particular, in ways that satisfy the needs that are not yet fulfilled. in addition, maslow suggested that these needs are not all equally important, but exist in a hierarchy (shaped like a pyramid), with the most important, basic needs at the bottom. | 1 set |
| 38 | maslow's systematic arrangement of needs according to priority, which assumes that basic needs must be met before less basic needs are arouse | 1 set |
| 39 | maslow's hierarchical division of motivation into levels that progress form basic physical needs to psychological needs to self-fulfillment needs. | 1 set |
| 40 | abraham maslow's humanistic theory of priorities from the lower levels of 1) basic biological needs, 2) safety and security needs, 3) belongingness and love, 4) self-esteem needs to 5) self-actualization needs; a lower need must be fulfilled before we can fulfill the next higher need. | 1 set |