Comparative Analysis of Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs and the Seven Valleys of Mystical Journey in Attar’s Conference of the Birds
Treasury of Persian Language and Literature January 1, 2025 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.61838/jtpll.178 via Semantic Scholar
Summary
This article compares Abraham Maslow's hierarchy of needs with the seven mystical valleys from Attar's Conference of the Birds, one from modern humanistic psychology and the other from Islamic–Persian mysticism. The comparison shows that in both systems, human transcendence progresses from basic needs toward meaning, unity, and self-transcendence. The analysis preserves epistemological distinctions while highlighting structural similarities and the inner evolutionary path of the human being. The findings indicate that mystical wayfaring in Islamic mysticism can, with conceptual boundaries preserved, be interpreted as convergent with the psychological path of self-actualization, opening a pathway for interdisciplinary dialogue between psychology and mysticism.
Study at a glance
| Design | theoretical or philosophical paper |
|---|---|
| Key finding | Mystical wayfaring in Islamic mysticism can, with conceptual boundaries preserved, be interpreted as convergent with the psychological path of self-actualization. |
Abstract
This article aims to conduct a comparative analysis of Abraham Maslow’s hierarchy of needs and the seven mystical valleys presented in Attar’s Conference of the Birds. Despite the fundamental differences between the two systems—one emerging from modern humanistic psychology and the other rooted in Islamic–Persian mysticism—the step-by-step comparative analysis demonstrates that in both, the process of human transcendence moves from basic needs toward meaning, unity, and self-transcendence. The comparison begins with an analysis of the internal structure of each system and, following an independent introduction to Maslow’s hierarchy and an exposition of Attar’s mystical valleys, each of the seven psychological and mystical stages is examined comparatively. In this analysis, while epistemological distinctions are preserved, structural similarities and the inner evolutionary path of the human being are highlighted. A comparative table enables the reader to grasp a concise and effective overview of each stage. Finally, by emphasizing the necessity of avoiding improper equivalence, critical perspectives regarding this comparison are also presented and discussed. The findings of this study indicate that mystical wayfaring in Islamic mysticism can, with conceptual boundaries preserved, be interpreted as convergent with the psychological path of self-actualization. This opens a pathway for interdisciplinary dialogue between psychology and mysticism.