Originally published: Columbus : Ohio State University Press, 1964. Preface has c1970. Includes bibliographical references (p. 117-123).
Contents:
ch. 8. Conclusions. ch. 2. Dichotomized science and dichotomized religion -- ch. 3. "Core-religious," or "transcendent," experience -- ch. 4. Organizational dangers to trascendent experiences -- ch. 5. Hope, skepticism, and man's higher nature -- ch. 6. Science and the religious liberals and non-theists -- ch. 7. Value-free education -- ch. 8. Conclusions.
Summary:
Written in the mid-1960s, this is Maslow's classic treatise on transcendent states of being and their essential value in human life. Proposing religious experience as a legitimate subject for scientific investigation, Maslow studies the human need for spiritual expression.
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