MASLOW, AH. _The Farther Reaches of Human Nature_
pg 133-135 chapter 9 "Notes on Being-Psychology"

III. The Being-Values (as Descriptions of the World Perceived
                       in Peak Experiences)

The characteristics of being are also the values of being. (Paralleled by the
characteristics of fully human people, the preferences of full human people;
the characteristics of selfhood [identity] in peak experiences; the
characteristics of ideal art; the characteristics of ideal children; the
characteristics of ideal mathematical demonstrations, of ideal experiments
and theories, of ideal science and knowledge; the far goals of all ideal
[Taoistic noninterfering] psychotherapies; the far goals of ideal humanistic
education; the far goals and the expression of some kinds of religion; the
characteristics of the ideally good environment and of the ideally good
society.)

1. Truth: honesty; reality; (nakedness; simplicity; richness; essentiality;
   oughtness; beauty; pure; clean and unadulterated; completeness).
2. Goodness: (rightness; desirability; oughtness; justice; benevolence;
   honesty);(we love it, are attracted to it, approve of it).
3. Beauty: (rightness; form; aliveness; simplicity; richness; wholeness,
   perfection; completion; uniqueness; honesty).
4. Wholeness: (unity; integration; tendency to oneness; interconnectedness;
   simplicity; organization; structure; order; not dissociated; synergy;
   homonomous and integrative tendencies).
4a. Dichotomy-transcendence: (acceptance, resolution, integration, or
    transcendence of dichotomies, polarities, opposites, contradictions);
    synergy (i.e., transformations of opposites into unities, of
    antagonists into collaborating or mutually enhancing partners.)
5. Aliveness: (process; not-deadness; spontaneity; self-regulation;
   full-functioning; changing and yet remaining the same; expressing itself).
6. Uniqueness: (idiosyncracy; individuality; noncomparability; novelty;
   quale; suchness; nothing else like it).
7. Perfection: (nothing superfluous;  nothing lacking; everything in its
   right place, unimprovable; just-rightness; just-so-ness; suitability;
   justice;completeness; nothing beyond; oughtness).
7a. Necessity: (inevitability; it must be just that way; not changed in
    any slightest way; and it is good that it is that way).
8. Completion: (ending; finality; justice; it's finished; no more changing
   of the Gestalt; fulfillment; finis and telos; nothing missing or lacking;
   totality;fulfillment of destiny; cessation; climax; consummation; closure;
   death before rebirth; cessation and completion of growth and development).
9. Justice: (fairness; oughtness; suitability; architectonic quality;
   necessity; inevitability; disinterestedness; nonpartiality).
9a. Order: (lawfulness; rightness; nothing superfluous; perfectly arranged).
10. Simplicity: (honesty; nakedness; essentiality; abstract, unmistakability;
    essential skeletal structure; the heart of the matter; bluntness; only
    that which is necessary; without ornament; nothing extra or superfluous).
11. Richness: (differentiation; complexity; intricacy; totality;
    nothing missing or hidden; all there; "nonimportance", i.e., everything
    is equally important; nothing is unimportant; everything left
    the way it is, without improving, simplifying, abstracting, rearranging).
12. Effortlessness: (ease; lack of strain, striving, or difficulty; grace;
    perfect and beautiful functioning).
13. Playfulness: (fun; joy; amusement; gaiety; humor; exuberance;
    effortlessness).
14: Self-sufficiency: (autonomy; independence; not-needing-anything-ther-than-
    itself-in-order-to-be-itself; self-determining; environment-transcendence;
    separateness; living by its own laws; identity).