309
In just a moment, 27-year-old Aron Ralston’s life changed. An 800-pound boulder dis-
lodged in a narrow canyon where Ralston was hiking in an isolated Utah canyon, pinning
his lower arm to the ground.
For the next fi ve days,
Ralston lay in the dense, lonely forest, unable to escape. An
experienced climber who had search-and-rescue training, he had ample time to consider
his options. He tried unsuccessfully to chip away at the rock, and he rigged up ropes
and pulleys around the boulder in a vain effort to move it.
Finally, out of water and nearly dehydrated, Ralston reasoned there was only one
option left short of dying. In acts of incredible bravery, Ralston
broke two bones in his
wrist, applied a tourniquet, and used a dull pen knife to amputate his arm beneath
the elbow.
Freed from his entrapment, Ralston climbed down from where he had been pinned
and then hiked fi ve miles to safety (Cox, 2003; Lofholm, 2003).
What motivation lay behind Ralston’s resolve?
To answer this question, psychologists employ the concept of
motivation, the
factors that direct and energize the behavior of humans and other organisms. Moti-
vation has biological, cognitive,
and social aspects, and the complexity of the concept
has led psychologists to develop a variety of approaches. All seek to explain the
energy that guides people’s behavior in specifi c directions.
Instinct Approaches:
Born to Be Motivated
When psychologists fi rst tried to explain motivation, they turned to
instincts, inborn
patterns of behavior that are biologically determined rather than learned. According
to instinct approaches to motivation, people and animals are born preprogrammed
with sets of behaviors essential to their survival. Those instincts
provide the energy
that channels behavior in appropriate directions. Hence, sexual behavior may be a
response to an instinct to reproduce, and exploratory behavior may be motivated by
an instinct to examine one’s territory.
This conception presents several diffi culties, however. For one thing, psycholo-
gists do not agree on what, or even how many, primary instincts exist.
One early
psychologist, William McDougall (1908), suggested that there are 18 instincts. Other
theorists came up with even more—with one sociologist (Bernard, 1924) claiming
that there are exactly 5,759 distinct instincts!
Furthermore, explanations based on the concept of instincts do not go very far
toward explaining why one specifi c pattern of behavior, and not others, has appeared
in a given species. In addition, although it is clear that much animal behavior is based
on instincts, much of the variety and complexity of human
behavior is learned and
thus cannot be seen as instinctual.
As a result of these shortcomings, newer explanations have replaced conceptions
of motivation based on instincts. However, instinct approaches still play a role in
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: