Play and Intrinsic Rewards

An analysis of the reported experiences of people involved in various play-forms (i.e., rock-climbing, chess, dance, basketball, music composition) suggests that the qualities which make these activities enjoyable are the following: (a) a person is able to concentrate on a limited stimulus field, (b) in which he or she can use his or her skills to meet clear demands, (c) thereby forgetting his or her own problems, and (d) his or her own separate identity, (e) at the same time obtaining a feeling of control over the environment, (f) which may result in a transcendence of ego-boundaries and consequent psychic integration with metapersonal systems. A formal analysis is carried out to establish what are the characteristics that an activitiy must have to provide such intrinsically rewarding experiences. The implications of intrinsic rewards for the understanding of human motivation are briefly discussed.

[1]  S. Freud The Ego and the Id , 1923 .

[2]  J. Piaget The Moral Judgment of the Child , 1932 .

[3]  T. Abel,et al.  Mind, Self, and Society , 1934 .

[4]  J. Sartre,et al.  Being and Nothingness , 2022 .

[5]  Frank A. Beach,et al.  Current Concepts of Play in Animals , 1945, American Naturalist.

[6]  R. F. Hull,et al.  Zen in the Art of Archery , 1948 .

[7]  E. Erikson Childhood and Society , 1965 .

[8]  J. Piaget Play, dreams and imitation in childhood , 1951 .

[9]  B. Ghiselin,et al.  The Creative Process , 2010 .

[10]  Peter Worsley The trumpet shall sound , 1957 .

[11]  M. Eliade Yoga: Immortality and Freedom , 1960 .

[12]  W. R. Garner Applications of Information Theory to Psychology , 1959 .

[13]  R. R. Bush,et al.  Games in Culture , 1959 .

[14]  C. Lasch,et al.  Life Against Death , 1959 .

[15]  Gerald Abrahams The Chess Mind , 1960 .

[16]  A. Maslow Toward a Psychology of Being , 1962 .

[17]  B. Sutton-Smith,et al.  Child training and game involvement , 1962 .

[18]  Marghanita Laski,et al.  Ecstasy, a Study of Some Secular and Religious Experiences , 1962 .

[19]  Abraham H. Maslow Humanistic Science and Transcendent Experiences , 1965 .

[20]  Play, exploration and territory in mammals : the proceedings of a symposium held at the Zoological Society of London on 19 and 20 November 1965 , 1966 .

[21]  D. Berlyne Curiosity and exploration. , 1966, Science.

[22]  P. Berger,et al.  Social Construction of Reality , 1991, The SAGE International Encyclopedia of Mass Media and Society.

[23]  J. M. Roberts,et al.  Cross-Cultural Correlates of Games of Chance 1 , 1966 .

[24]  G. Kenyon Six scales for assessing attitude toward physical activity. , 1968, Research quarterly.

[25]  Donald M. MacKay,et al.  Information, mechanism and meaning , 1969 .

[26]  I. Eibl-Eibesfeldt Ethology, the biology of behavior , 1970 .

[27]  J. P. Scott,et al.  Social control and social change , 1971 .

[28]  Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi,et al.  An Exploratory Model of Play , 1971 .

[29]  A. Maslow The Farther Reaches of Human Nature , 1971 .

[30]  R. Ornstein,et al.  On the Psychology of Meditation , 1971 .

[31]  Hugo Rahner Man at Play , 1972 .

[32]  D. L. Miller,et al.  Theology of play , 1972 .

[33]  Marc Bekoff,et al.  The Development of Social Interaction, Play, and Metacommunication in Mammals: An Ethological Perspective , 1972, The Quarterly Review of Biology.

[34]  R. Fagen Selective and Evolutionary Aspects of Animal Play , 1974, The American Naturalist.

[35]  Jacob W. Getzets The Creative vision : a longitudinal study of problem finding in art / Jacob W. Getzels, Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi , 1976 .

[36]  D. Berlyne Conflict, arousal, and curiosity , 2014 .