200 words each
Burkley
First edition
Chapter 2
Philosophical Origins of Motivation
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Learning Objectives (1 of 2)
2.1 Analyze the earliest philosophical theories that were devised to explain human motivation
2.1.1 Describe how Plato explained human motivation
2.1.2 Explain the components of Aristotle's theories regarding motivation
2.1.3 Describe the motivation philosophies of the Stoics
2.2 Contrast the medieval and post-Renaissance period philosophies that were devised to explain human motivation
2.2.1 Explain Saint Augustine's philosophy of motivation
2.2.2 Describe Saint Thomas Aquinas's perspective of motivation
2.2.3 Describe how Descartes's Passions related to his philosophy of motivation
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Slide 2 is list of textbook LO numbers and statements
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Learning Objectives (2 of 2)
2.2.4 Explain how Hobbes's theory of relationship between thoughts and emotions aligned to the philosophy of motivation
2.2.5 Explain how Locke contributed to the philosophy of motivation
2.2.6 Describe Hume's philosophy of motivation
2.3 Evaluate the cause of the seismic shift in philosophical explanations of motivation in the Age of Enlightenment
2.3.1 Analyze Bentham's philosophy of motivation in relationship to other theories of motivation during the Age of Enlightenment
2.3.2 Analyze Kant's philosophy of motivation in relationship to other theories of motivation during the Age of Enlightenment
2.3.3 Analyze Schopenhauer's philosophy of motivation in relationship to other theories of motivation during the Age of Enlightenment
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Slide 2 is list of textbook LO numbers and statements
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Introduction: Philosophical Origins of Motivation
Key questions to be answered
Ancient Greeks
Medieval and post-Renaissance philosophers
Age of Enlightenment
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The earliest motivation theory is hedonism, but there was also a push to separate emotion from reason.
During the medieval and post-Renaissance times, philosophers examined passions and dualism to understand motivation.
The Age of Enlightenment examined utilitarianism, emotions, and, finally, used the term “motivation.”
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2.1: Ancient Greeks (1 of 3)
2.1: Analyze the earliest philosophical theories that were devised to explain human motivation
The early philosophical theories to explain motivation
Hedonism
Pleasure
2.1.1: Plato
2.1.1: Describe how Plato explained human motivation
The Tripartite Theory of Motivation
Rational
Spirited
Appetitive
Metaphor of a chariot rider pulled by two horses
Unequal pleasures
Physical
Mental
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2.1: Analyze the earliest philosophical theories that were devised to explain human motivation
Point 1 – The early philosophical theories to explain motivation
The early Greek philosophers believed humans are motivated to pursue pleasure and avoid pain.
2.1.1: Plato
2.1.1: Describe how Plato explained human motivation
Point 1 – The Tripartite Theory of Motivation
Plato argued that these three sources of the psyche were in constant conflict with each other.
He likened the conflict to a chariot rider (rational) pulled by the ugly black horse (appetitive) who is kept in check by the white noble horse (spirited).
Point 2 – Unequal pleasures
Plato believed the pleasures from physical desires were inferior to those from higher-order desires.
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Figure 2.1: Plato’s Tripartite Theory of Motivation
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2.1: Ancient Greeks (2 of 3)
2.1.2: Aristotle
2.1.2: Explain the components of Aristotle's theories regarding motivation
The golden mean
Aristotle’s four causes
Efficient cause
Material cause
Formal cause
Final cause
Aristotle’s passions
Somatic
Psychic
Aristotle’s two types of happiness
Hedonic
Eudaimonic
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2.1.2: Aristotle
2.1.2: Explain the components of Aristotle's theories regarding motivation
Point 1 – Aristotle, as well as other philosophers, argued that wise humans seek pleasure in moderation.
Point 2 – Aristotle’s four causes
Efficient cause is something about from the focal target (you) that caused it to change.
The material cause is the physical material that makes up the focus target.
The formal cause is the functional organization of the individual that it shares with other members of its species.
Final cause is the aim or purpose being served.
How could these causes be applied to you yelling at your roommate?
Point 3 – Aristotle’s passions
Somatic passions include emotions with the body.
Psychic passions are emotions associated with the mind.
What are some examples of somatic and psychic passions? When is too much passion bad?
Point 4 – Aristotle’s two types of happiness
Hedonic happiness is the attainment of positive emotions and the absence of negative emotions; therefore, it focuses on the outcome.
Eudaimonic happiness refers to living a life that has meaning and striving for excellence in all that you do.
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2.1: Ancient Greeks (3 of 3)
2.1.3: The Stoics
2.1.3: Describe the motivation philosophies of the Stoics
Who were the Stoics?
School of philosophers
Emotions as a destructive motivational force
The Stoics’ four types of emotions
Desire
Fear
Pleasure
Pain
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2.1.3: The Stoics
2.1.3: Describe the motivation philosophies of the Stoics
Point 1 – Who were the Stoics?
How were the Stoics different from Plate and Aristotle?
The Stoics placed importance on logic and reasoning.
Point 2 – The Stoics’ four types of emotions
Refer to Table 2.1: The Stoics’ Four Types of Emotions.
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Table 2.1: The Stoics’ Four Types of Emotions
| Emotion | Description |
| Desire (epithumia) | Desire is directed toward something good in the future. |
| Fear (phobos) | Fear is directed toward something bad in the future. |
| Pleasure (hedone) | Pleasure is experienced when we obtain what we want and avoid what we fear in the present. |
| Pain (lupe) | Pain is experienced when we fail to obtain what we want and succumb to what we fear in the present. |
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2.2: Medieval and Post-Renaissance Philosophers (1 of 6)
2.2: Contrast the medieval and post-Renaissance period philosophies that were devised to explain human motivation
The medieval and post-Renaissance philosophies of motivation
Morality
Sin
2.2.1: Saint Augustine
2.2.1: Explain Saint Augustine's philosophy of motivation
How did Saint Augustine explain motivation?
Emotions contrary to reason
Emotions as choice or will
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2.2: Contrast the medieval and post-Renaissance period philosophies that were devised to explain human motivation
Point 1 – The medieval and post-Renaissance philosophies of motivation
The Stoics’ perception of emotions was alive and well during this time period.
There was some dissention among philosophers, however.
2.2.1: Saint Augustine
2.2.1: Explain Saint Augustine's philosophy of motivation
Point 1 – How did Saint Augustine explain motivation?
Saint Augustine argued that emotions are not inherently good or bad, and the distinction resides in our choice of which objects we feel the emotions toward.
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2.2: Medieval and Post-Renaissance Philosophers (2 of 6)
2.2.2: Saint Thomas Aquinas
2.2.2: Describe Saint Thomas Aquinas's perspective of motivation
How did Saint Thomas Aquinas explain motivation?
Emotions tied to physical body
Matter and form
Aquinas’ types of emotions
Concupiscible passions
Irascible passions
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2.2.2: Saint Thomas Aquinas
2.2.2: Describe Saint Thomas Aquinas's perspective of motivation
Point 1 – How did Saint Thomas Aquinas explain motivation?
Aquinas believed the passions arose from the body (matter), and could affect the mind (form).
Point 2 – Aquinas’ types of emotions
Concupiscible passions are lustful passions that reflect basic desires to pursue good things and avoid bad things.
Irascible passions occur whenever an obstacle blocks one of the concupiscible passions.
What are examples of each?
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2.2: Medieval and Post-Renaissance Philosophers (3 of 6)
2.2.3: René Descartes
2.2.3: Describe how Descartes's Passions related to his philosophy of motivation
Descartes’ dualism
Mind-body
Actions and objects do not necessarily have a higher-order purpose
Rational soul
“I think, therefore I am.”
Foundation for instinct
Descartes’ passions
Love
Wonder
Hate
Desire
Joy
Sorrow
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2.2.3: René Descartes
2.2.3: Describe how Descartes's Passions related to his philosophy of motivation
Point 1 – Descartes’ dualism
The mind is a nonphysical entity that is uniquely different from the body.
Descartes disagreed with Aristotle and argued that when it came to physical phenomena, they could be completely explained by mechanics.
Only human behavior was driven by a sense of purpose.
Descartes argued that the mind and body influence each other, and at times, the rational mind was not always in control.
Point 2 – Descartes’ passions
Descartes argued that there exist six primary passions or emotions, each characterized by a motivational force that moves humans toward or away from a particular object.
Descartes’ theory of passions is one of the earliest recognitions of the important tole that emotions play in motivation.
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Figure 2.2: The Six Primary Passions or Emotions
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2.2: Medieval and Post-Renaissance Philosophers (4 of 6)
2.2.4: Thomas Hobbes
2.2.4: Explain how Hobbes's theory of relationship between thoughts and emotions aligned to the philosophy of motivation
Hobbes’ central ideas
Abandoned Descartes’ mind portion of dualism
Materialism
Hedonistic
Rationalism as an illusion
Hobbes’ theory of the relationship between thoughts and emotions
Desire for an outcome
Expectation of the outcome
Expectancy-value theory
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2.2.4: Thomas Hobbes
2.2.4: Explain how Hobbes's theory of relationship between thoughts and emotions aligned to the philosophy of motivation
Point 1 – Hobbes’ central ideas
Materialism suggests that all human behavior consists of blind, automatic reactions to environmental stimuli.
Life tries to seek out pleasure and avoid pain.
Hedonism is the principle of motivation.
Point 2 – Hobbes’ theory of the relationship between thoughts and emotions
Expectation for an outcome is not enough for action; one must also have the desire.
Hobbes’ ideas would later be revisited in both behaviorism and in expectancy-value theory.
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2.2: Medieval and Post-Renaissance Philosophers (5 of 6)
2.2.5: John Locke
2.2.5: Explain how Locke contributed to the philosophy of motivation
Locke’s ideas
Blank slate
Nurture
Behavior stems from uneasiness
Hedonism
Delay of gratification
Locke’s additional contributions
Empiricism
American Declaration of Independence
Separation of church and state
Separation of government branches
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2.2.5: John Locke
2.2.5: Explain how Locke contributed to the philosophy of motivation
Point 1 – Locke’s ideas
Locke argued that the human mind was a tabula rasa and that behavior was solely motivated by nurture (environment).
While Locke’s ideas rely on hedonistic principles, he argues that people can choose not to give into their temptations.
Point 2 – Locke’s additional contributions
Experience is the only way to gain knowledge; his ideas formed the basis for the scientific method.
American founders built off of the tabula rasa concept, and argued that all men (and women) are created equal.
Many of Locke’s ideas helped shape American society.
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2.2: Medieval and Post-Renaissance Philosophers (6 of 6)
2.2.6: David Hume
2.2.6: Describe Hume's philosophy of motivation
How did Hume explain motivation?
Desire
Beliefs
Hume’s passions
Direct
Indirect
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2.2.6: David Hume
2.2.6: Describe Hume's philosophy of motivation
Point 1 – How did Hume explain motivation?
The rational mind is “the slave of the passions.”
Beliefs play an important role in the formation and experience of emotions.
Point 2 – Hume’s passions
Direct passions arise immediately from feelings of pleasure and pain.
Indirect passions are experienced through pleasure and pain, but with the addition of beliefs associated with the object producing the pleasure or pain.
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2.3: Evaluate the cause of the seismic shift in philosophical explanations of motivation in the Age of Enlightenment
How did the explanations of motivation change in the Age of Enlightenment?
Willpower
Free will
Morality
Redefining hedonism
2.3.1: Jeremy Bentham
2.3.1: Analyze Bentham's philosophy of motivation in relationship to other theories of motivation during the Age of Enlightenment
What is Bentham’s utilitarianism?
Restatement of hedonism
2.3: Age of Enlightenment (1 of 3)
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2.3: Evaluate the cause of the seismic shift in philosophical explanations of motivation in the Age of Enlightenment
Point 1 – How did the explanations of motivation change in the Age of Enlightenment?
Philosophers in the Age of Enlightenment focused on the topics of freedom, reason, knowledge, and science.
2.3.1: Jeremy Bentham
2.3.1: Analyze Bentham's philosophy of motivation in relationship to other theories of motivation during the Age of Enlightenment
Point 1 – What is Bentham’s utilitarianism?
Utilitarianism asserts that the utility of a particular course of action is determined by how much it maximizes happiness and reduces suffering.
Point 2 – Beyond prior hedonistic theories
Bentham was the first to emphasize the importance of certain motivational qualities.
Bentham created a mathematical algorithm to compute the utility of a particular course of action.
Bentham encouraged the comparison of the pros and cons of any moral dilemma.
Bentham also created a list of 14 sources of motivations, what he called the “springs of human action.”
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Beyond prior hedonistic theories
Intensity, duration, certainty, propinquity, fecundity, purity, extent
Felicific calculus
Hedons vs. dolors
List of pains and pleasures
2.3.2: Immanuel Kant
2.3.2: Analyze Kant's philosophy of motivation in relationship to other theories of motivation during the Age of Enlightenment
What was Kant’s philosophy of motivation?
Reason is golden
Minimize impact of emotions
Affect vs. passion
2.3: Age of Enlightenment (2 of 3)
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2.3.2: Immanuel Kant
2.3.2: Analyze Kant's philosophy of motivation in relationship to other theories of motivation during the Age of Enlightenment
Point 1 – What was Kant’s philosophy of motivation?
Kant’s beliefs were reminiscent of the Stoics.
He distinguished between affect and passion; affect is quick to build, and passion is slow.
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2.3.3: Arthur Schopenhauer
2.3.3: Analyze Schopenhauer's philosophy of motivation in relationship to other theories of motivation during the Age of Enlightenment
What was Schopenhauer’s philosophy of motivation?
First to use “motivation”
Will as intangible active force of nature, universe, and mankind
Body’s experiences
Body through an objective lens
Body through a subjective lens
Driving behavior
Instincts
Impulses
2.3: Age of Enlightenment (3 of 3)
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2.3.3: Arthur Schopenhauer
2.3.3: Analyze Schopenhauer's philosophy of motivation in relationship to other theories of motivation during the Age of Enlightenment
Point 1 – What was Schopenhauer’s philosophy of motivation?
Schopenhauer viewed will as a blind, mindless, aimless, irrational urge that propels human action toward largely selfish endeavors.
Point 2 – Body’s experiences
Schopenhauer argued that the objective and subjective outcomes occur at the same time, and therefore, an argument for will is an argument against free will.
Point 3 – Driving behavior
Schopenhauer believed all human action occurs because we are acting in accordance with our “inborn and immutable behavior,” which is inherently selfish.
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The earliest philosophical theories that were devised to explain human motivation
The medieval and post-Renaissance period philosophies that were devised to explain human motivation
The cause of the seismic shift in philosophical explanations of motivation in the Age of Enlightenment
Summary: Philosophical Origins of Motivation
Copyright © 2018 Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved
The earliest theories used to explain motivation stemmed from ancient Greek and tended to focus on hedonism. However, the Stoics also tried to separate emotion from reason.
During the medieval times, Saint Augustine argued that emotions were not inherently good or bad, but were defined by whether they are directed toward a good or bad object. Saint Thomas Aquinas examined two passions: concupiscible and irascible. Descartes promoted mind-body dualism and argued that human behavior is a function of urges of the body and a rational mind. Hobbes endorsed materialism, while Locke believed the mind was a tabula rasa. Hume argued that cognition can alter emotion.
During the Age of Enlightenment, the understanding of motivation changed greatly. Bentham endorsed utilitarianism, while Kant focused on affect and passion. Schopenhauer was the first person to use the term “motivation,” and argued that will is the subjective illusion that we control our own movements when, in fact, we do not control them.
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