Religions, Values, Peak Experiences
Introduction

Religions, Values, and
Peak Experiences is presented as a contribution to
philosophical and scientific thinking, as one interpretation of a fundamental
aspect of life, as a step toward a better understanding among the religions of
the world, and as a possible program for the development of a healthy
relationship between modern science and modern theology.
The world has seen increased communication among political and economic
philosophies, among the social sciences, among religions, among the physical
sciences, and among people in general. Although there are individual
differences in the cultural and material developments of the nations of the
world, there has been a growing movement toward the establishment of a world
philosophy in the social and physical sciences.
Concurrently with this growth of international communication and the unity it
has brought about in the sciences, and the lesser amount of agreement it has
engendered among political and social theorists, there has been a rising
sentiment in favor of increased communication among, if not unity of, the
religions of the world. Protestant groups have abandoned, or are abandoning,
their strict sectarian views. The Ecumenical Council has brought changes that,
although so far largely procedural, give promise of increased world
co-operation between the Roman Catholic church and other faiths. And efforts
have been and are being made to reconcile the views of the great religious
leaders of all major religions-Jewish, Christian, Muslim, Buddhist, and
Hindu-religions that, in the past, have been regarded by their followers as
having been founded upon the direct revelation of a supreme being to a chosen
earthly prophet.
Traditionally, religion has been of the spirit; science, of the body; and there
has been a wide philosophic gulf between the knowledge of body and the
knowledge of spirit. The natural sciences and religion have generally been
considered as natural and eternal opponents.
William James, through his psychology, especially his Varieties of Religious
Experience, and John Dewey, in his A Common Faith, have strongly influenced the
views of Dr. Maslow in this, the thirty-fifth volume in the "Kappa Delta Pi
Lecture Series." Dissenting from the followers of those prophets who claimed
direct revelation from God, and from the nineteenth-century scientists who
denied not only direct revelation but God himself, the author declares that
these revelations were, in his words, "peak-experiences" which are
characteristic not only of specially ordained emissaries of God but of mankind
in general. Dr. Maslow considers these revelations valid psychological events
worthy of scientific, rather than metaphysical, study-keys to a better
understanding of a peculiarly "human" aspect of man's existence.
Preface
Since this book was first written, there has been much turmoil in the world and,
therefore, much to learn. Several of the lessons I have learned are relevant
here, certainly in the sense that they are helpful supplements to the main
thesis of the book. Or perhaps I should call them warnings about over-extreme,
dangerous, and one-sided uses of this thesis. Of course, this is a standard
hazard for thinkers who try to be holistic, integrative, and inclusive. They
learn inevitably that most people think atomistically, in terms of either-or,
black-white, all in or all out, of mutual exclusiveness and separativeness. A
good example of what I mean is the mother who gave her son two ties for his
birthday. As he put on one of them to please her, she asked sadly, "And why do
you hate the other tie?"
I think I can best state my warning against polarization and dichotomizing by a
historical approach. I see in the history of many organized religions a
tendency to develop two extreme wings: the "mystical" and individual on the one
hand, and the legalistic and organizational on the other. The profoundly and
authentically religious person integrates these trends easily and
automatically. The forms, rituals, ceremonials, and verbal formulae in which he
was reared remain for him experientially rooted, symbolically meaningful,
archetypal, unitive. Such a person may go through the same motions and
behaviors as his more numerous coreligionists, but he is never reduced to the
behavioral, as most of them are. Most people lose or forget the subjectively
religious experience, and redefine Religion as a set of habits, behaviors,
dogmas, forms, which at the extreme becomes entirely legalistic and
bureaucratic, conventional, empty, and in the truest meaning of the word,
anti-religious. The mystic experience, the illumination, the great awakening,
along with the charismatic seer who started the whole thing, are forgotten,
lost, or transformed into their opposites. Organized Religion, the churches,
finally may become the major enemies of the religious experience and the
religious experiencer. This is a main thesis of this book.
But on the other wing, the mystical (or experiential) also has its traps which I
have not stressed sufficiently. As the more Apollonian type can veer toward the
extreme of being reduced to the merely behavioral, so does the mystical type
run the risk of being reduced to the merely experiential. Out of the joy and
wonder of his ecstasies and peak-experiences he may be tempted to seek them, ad
hoc, and to value them exclusively, as the only or at least the highest goods
of life, giving up other criteria of right and wrong. Focused on these
wonderful subjective experiences, he may run the danger of turning away from
the world and from other people in his search for triggers to peak-experiences,
any triggers. In a word, instead of being temporarily self absorbed and
inwardly searching, he may become simply a sel1ish person, seeking his own
personal salvation, trying to get into "heaven" even if other people can't, and
finally even perhaps using other people as triggers, as means to his sole end
of higher states of consciousness. In a word, he may become not only selfish
but also evil. My impression, from the history of mysticism, is that this trend
can sometimes wind up in meanness, nastiness, loss of compassion, or even in
the extreme of sadism.
Another possible booby trap for the (polarizing) mystics throughout history has
been the danger of needing to escalate the triggers, so to speak. That is,
stronger and stronger stimuli are needed to produce the same response. If the
sole good in life becomes the peak-experience, and if all means to this end
become good, and if more peak-experiences are better than fewer, then one can
force the issue, push actively, strive and hunt and fight for them. So they
have often moved over into magic, into the secret and esoteric, into the
exotic, the occult, the dramatic and effortful, the dangerous, the cultish.
Healthy openness to the mysterious, the realistically humble recognition that
we don't know much, the modest and grateful acceptance of gratuitous grace and
of just plain good luck-all these can shade over into the anti rational, the
anti-empirical, the antiscientific, the anti-verbal, the anti-conceptual. The
peak-experience may then be exalted as the best or even the only path to
knowledge, and thereby all the tests and verifications of the validity of the
illumination may be tossed aside.
The possibility that the inner voices, the "revelations," may be mistaken, a
lesson from history that should come through loud and clear, is denied, and
there is then no way of finding out whether the voices within are the voices of
good or evil. (George Bernard Shaw's Saint Joan confronts this problem.)
Spontaneity (the impulses from our best self) gets confused with impulsivity
and acting out (the impulses from our sick self), and there is then no way to
tell the difference.
Impatience (especially the built-in impatience of youth) dictates shortcuts of
all kinds. Drugs, which can be helpful when wisely used, become dangerous when
foolishly used. The sudden insight becomes "all," and the patient and
disciplined "working through" is postponed or devalued. Instead of being
"surprised by joy," "turning on" is scheduled, promised, advertised, sold,
hustled into being, and can get to be regarded as a commodity. Sex-love,
certainly one possible path to the experience of the sacred, can become mere
"screwing," i.e., desacralized. More and more exotic, artificial, striving
"techniques" may escalate further and further until they become necessary and
until jadedness and impotence ensue.
The search for the exotic, the strange, the unusual, the uncommon has often
taken the form of pilgrimages, of turning away from the world, the "Journey to
the East," to another country or to a different Religion. The great lesson from
the true mystics, from the Zen monks, and now also from the-Humanistic and
Transpersonal psychologists-that the sacred is in the ordinary, that it is to
be found in one's daily life, in one's neighbors, friends, and family, in one's
back yard, and that travel may be a flight from confronting the sacred-this
lesson can be easily lost. To be looking elsewhere for miracles is to me a sure
sign of ignorance that everything is miraculous.
The rejection of a priestly caste who claimed to be exclusive custodians of a
private hot line to the sacred was, in my opinion, a great step forward in the
emancipation of mankind, and we have the mystics-among others-to thank for this
achievement. But this valid insight can also be used badly when dichotomized
and exaggerated by foolish people. They can distort it into a rejection of the
guide, the teacher, the sage, the therapist, the counselor, the elder, the
helper along the path to self-actualization and the realm of Being. This is
often a great danger and always an unnecessary handicap.
To summarize, the healthily Apollonian (which means integrated with the
healthily Dionysian) can become pathologized into an extreme, exaggerated, and
dichotomized compulsive-obsessional sickness. But also the healthily Dionysian
(which means integrated with the healthily Apollonian) can become pathologized
at its extreme into hysteria with all its symptoms.
Obviously, what I am suggesting here is a pervasively holistic attitude and way
of thinking. Not only must the experimental be stressed and brought back into
psychology and philosophy as an opponent of the merely abstract and abstruse,
of the a priori, of what I have called "helium-filled words." It must then also
be integrated with the abstract and the verbal, i.e., we must make a place for
"experientially based concepts," and for "experientially filled words," that
is, for an experience-based rationality in contrast to the a priori rationality
that we have come almost to identify with rationality itself.
The same sort of thing is true for the relations between experientialism
and-social reform. Shortsighted people make them opposites, mutually exclusive.
Of course, historically this has often happened and does today still happen in
many. But it need not happen. It is a mistake, an atomistic error, an example
of the dichotomizing and pathologizing that goes along with immaturity. The
empirical fact is that self-actualizing people, our best experiencers, are also
our most compassionate, our great improvers and reformers of society, our most
effective fighters against injustice, inequality, slavery, cruelty,
exploitation (and also our best fighters for excellence, effectiveness,
competence). And it also becomes clearer and clearer that the best "helpers"
are the most fully human persons. What I may call the bodhisattvic path is an
integration of self-improvement and social zeal, i.e., the best way to become a
better "helper" is to become a better person. But one necessary aspect of
becoming a better person is via helping other people. So one must and can do
both simultaneously. (The question "Which comes first" is an atomistic
question.)
In this context I would like to refer to my demonstration in the Preface to the
revised edition (1970) of my Motivation and Personality that normative zeal is
not incompatible with scientific objectivity, but can be integrated with it,
eventuating in a higher form of objectivity, i.e., the Taoistic.
What this all adds up to is this: small r religion is quite compatible, at the
higher levels of personal development, with rationality, with science, with
social passion. Not only this, but it can, in principle, quite easily integrate
the healthily animal, material, and selfish with the naturalistically
transcendent, spiritual, and axiological. (See my "A Theory of Metamotivation:
The Biological Rooting of the Value-Life," Journal of Humanistic Psychology,
1967, VII, 93-127).
For other reasons also, I now consider that the book was too imbalanced toward
the individualistic and too hard on groups, organizations, and communities.
Even within these last six or seven years we have learned not to think of
organizations as necessarily bureaucratic, as we have learned more about
humanistic, need-fulfilling kinds of groups, from, e.g., the research in
Organization Development and Theory Y management, the rapidly accumulating
experience with T-groups, encounter groups, and personal-growth groups, the
successes of the Synanon community, of the Israeli kibbutzim, etc. (See my
listing of the Eupsychian Network, an appendix in the revised edition [1968] of
my Toward a Psychology of Being.) As a matter of fact, I can say much more
firmly than I ever did, for many empirical reasons, that basic human needs can
be fulfilled only by and through other human beings, i.e., society. The need
for community (belongingness, contact, groupiness) is itself a basic need.
Loneliness, isolation, ostracism, rejection by the group-these are not only
painful but pathogenic as well. And of course it has also been known for
decades that humanness and specieshood in the infant are only a potentiality
and must be actualized by the society.
My study of the failure of most Utopian efforts has taught me to ask the basic
questions themselves in a more practicable and researchable way. "How good a
society does human nature permit?" and, "How good a human nature does society
permit?" (For the implications of this way of asking the questions, see my
Eupsychian Management: A Journal [1965] and my paper "Some Fundamental
Questions that Face the Normative Social Psychologist," Journal of Humanistic
Psychology, 1968, VIII.)
Finally, I would now add to the peak experience material a greater
consideration, not only of nadir-experiences, the psycholytic therapy of Grof,
confrontations with and reprieves from death, postsurgical visions, etc., but
also of the "plateau-experience." This is serene and calms rather than a
poignantly emotional, climactic, autonomic response to the miraculous, the
awesome, the sacralized, the Unitive, the B-values. So far as I can now tell
the high plateau-experience always has a noetic and cognitive element, which is
not always true for peak experiences, which can be purely and exclusively
emotional. It is far more voluntary than peak experiences are. One can learn to
see in this Unitive way almost at will. It then becomes a witnessing, an
appreciating, what one might call a serene, cognitive blissfulness which can,
however, have a quality of casualness and of lounging about.
There is more an element of surprise, and of disbelief, and of esthetic shock in
the peak-experience, more the quality of having such an experience for the
first time. I have pointed out elsewhere that the aging body and nervous system
is less capable of tolerating a really shaking peak-experience. I would add
here that maturing and aging mean also some loss of first-timeness, of novelty,
of sheer unpreparedness and surprise.
Peak-and plateau-experience differ also in their relations to death. The
peak-experience itself can often meaningfully be called a "little death," and a
rebirth in various senses. The less intense plateau experience is more often
experienced as pure enjoyment and happiness, as, let's say, in a mother sitting
quietly looking, by the hour, at her baby playing, and marveling, wondering,
philosophizing, not quite believing. She can experience this as a very
pleasant, continuing, contemplative experience rather than as something akin to
a climactic explosion which then ends.
Older people, making their peace with death, are more apt to be profoundly
touched with (sweet) sadness and tears at the contrast between their own
mortality and the eternal quality of what sets off the experience. This
contrast can make far more poignant and precious what is being witnessed, e.g.,
"The surf will be here forever and you will soon be gone. So hang on to it,
appreciate it, be fully conscious of it. Be grateful for it. You are lucky."
Very important today in a topical sense is the realization that plateau
experiencing can be achieved, learned, earned by long hard work. It can be
meaningfully aspired to. But I don't know of any way of bypassing the necessary
maturing, experiencing, living, learning. All of this takes time. A transient
glimpse is certainly possible in the peak-experiences which may, after all,
come sometimes to anyone. But, so to speak, to take up residence on the high
plateau of Unitive consciousness-that is another matter altogether. That tends
to be a lifelong effort. It should not be confused with the Thursday evening
turn-on that many youngsters think of as the path to transcendence. For that
matter, it should not be confused with any single experience. The "spiritual
disciplines," both the classical ones and the new ones that keep on being
discovered these days, all take time, work, discipline, study, commitment.
There is much more to say about these states which are clearly relevant to the
life of transcendence and the transpersonal and to experiencing life at the
level of Being. All I wish to do here with this brief mention is to correct the
tendency of some to identify experiences of transcendence as only dramatic,
orgasmic, transient, "peaky," like a moment on the top of Mount Everest. There
is also the high plateau, where one can stay "turned on."
If I were to summarize both the book and my remarks in this Preface in a few
words, I would say it this way: Man has a higher and transcendent nature, and
this is part of his essence, i.e., his biological nature as a member of a
species which has evolved. This means to me something which I had better spell
out clearly, namely, that this is a flat rejection of the Sartre type of
Existentialism, i.e., its denial of specieshood, and of a biological human
nature, and its refusal to face the existence of the biological sciences. It is
true that the word Existentialism is by now used in so many different ways by
different people, even in contradictory ways, that this indictment does not
apply to all who use the label. But just because of this diversity of usage,
the word is now almost useless, in my opinion, and had better be dropped. The
trouble is that I have no good alternative label to offer. If only there were
some way to say simultaneously: "Yes, man is in a way his own project and he
does make himself. But also there are limits upon what he can make himself
into. The 'project' is predetermined biologically for all men; it is to become
a man. He cannot adopt as his project for himself to become a chimpanzee. Or
even a female. Or a baby." The right label would have to combine the
humanistic, the transpersonal, and the transhuman. Besides, it would have to be
experiential (phenomenological), at least in its basing. It would have to be
holistic rather than dissecting. And it would have to be empirical rather than
a priori, etc., etc.
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