ABSTRACT

Weiner introduces -- and offers his own motivation for producing - - this most impressive work with the following:

There are two distinct approaches to the study of motivation. One stratagem is a product of academic, experimental procedures, while the second is an outgrowth of clinical, non-experimental methods. Each of the approaches has unique advantages and disadvantages. But all investigators in this field are guided by a single basic question, namely, "Why do organisms think and behave as they do?"

To help answer that basic question, Human Motivation presents an entire range of motivation studies -- from psychoanalytic, social learning and humanistic theory; to social facilitation, arousal, emotions, personal responsibility, and the irrationality of attributions; through chapterand verse of Hullian and Lewinian theory.

chapter 1|6 pages

Introduction

part I|132 pages

Need Reduction Theories

chapter 2|76 pages

The Psychoanalytic Theory of Motivation

chapter 3|54 pages

Drive Theory

part II|134 pages

Expectancy-Value Theories

chapter 4|38 pages

Kurt Lewin's Field Theory

chapter 5|50 pages

Achievement Theory

part III|164 pages

Mastery and Growth Theories

chapter 7|52 pages

Attribution Theory

chapter 8|80 pages

An Attributional Theory of Behavior

chapter 9|30 pages

Humanistic Theory and Personal Constructs

part IV|12 pages

Conclusion

chapter 10|10 pages

Overview and Concluding Remarks