4.1 Article

Getting a Grip on Normativity: A Phenomenological Response to Maslow's Call for a Humanistic Biology

Journal

JOURNAL OF HUMANISTIC PSYCHOLOGY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/00221678221147957

Keywords

Maslow; phenomenology; normativity; Edmund Husserl; Maurice Merleau-Ponty; agapic love; intentionality; time-consciousness; maximum grip; optimal givenness

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Maslow suggests studying exceptional individuals to identify biological traits distinguishing flourishing from languishing. His method is criticized as circular and has eugenic implications. However, his call to understand normativity and bridge the fact-value dichotomy is well-considered. A phenomenological approach reveals normativity at a pre-predicative level. Agapic love can work as a normative idea for ethical relations, subject to investigation within neuroscience through dialogue with phenomenology.
Maslow suggests that a study of superior human specimen might have the potential to identify biological traits that distinguish flourishing individuals from those who are languishing. Maslow's recommendation is open to criticisms. First, his method is circular. Second, the thrust of Maslow's project has a eugenic ring to it. However, while Maslow's eugenic vision should be sidelined, his call for an understanding of normativity and the need to overcome the fact-value dichotomy in psychology and neuroscience are well-considered recommendations. A phenomenological approach to normativity presents a more authentically humanistic approach to consideration of normativity. Husserl's concept of optimal givenness and Merleau-Ponty's notion of maximum grip illustrate that normativity is a quality that can be identified at a pre-predicative, implicit level of operative intentionality. Based on an examination of the notions of optimal givenness and maximum grip, the article further suggests that, within the context of interpersonal relations, agapic love can be understood to operate as a normative and regulative idea for ethical relations. Since this form of intentionality instantiates itself into perceptual and motor habits, normative ethical relations may be subject to investigation within neuroscience, to the extent that it maintains an ongoing dialogue with phenomenology.

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