Human motivation is commonly explained in terms of needs, goals, rewards, values, or meaning. While these approaches have generated major insights, they often leave insufficiently clarified a prior question: how is motivational priority actually organized in concrete human action? We argue that human beings do not act directly from fixed needs alone, nor simply from externally specified goals, but from the need, value, fear, or project that becomes situationally primary in light of who they believe they are. On this view, identity is not a secondary layer added to motivation, but its dynamic organizing center. We define identity broadly as the evolving organization of self-perception, personal history, aspiration, threatened selfhood, and projected future possibilities. This identity structure is shaped by the interaction of environment, developmental experience, cognitive capacity, and dispositional orientation. Because identity is dynamic rather than fixed, motivational organization must also be dynamic: what becomes primary in action changes as the self is reinterpreted, destabilized, reinforced, or reoriented over time. On this basis, we propose a theory of identity-mediated motivational prioritization. The central claim is that human action tends to follow the need or aim that the individual’s identity renders primary in a given situation. This framework helps explain why different individuals may respond very differently to similar circumstances, why the same person may radically reorganize priorities across life stages, and why many forms of action—such as sacrifice, vocation, self-transformation, withdrawal, or the pursuit of meaning—cannot be adequately reduced to immediate utility or static need hierarchies. We further argue that a psychologically credible account of motivation must include unconscious opacity and irrational dynamics. Identity is not always fully transparent to itself; motivational life may be shaped by conflict, discrepancy, repression, self-deception, or even attraction to disorder, risk, and existential intensity. These elements do not undermine the model, but reveal that motivational organization is structured without being fully conscious, and dynamic without being arbitrary. The paper concludes by suggesting that this framework has implications beyond classical motivational psychology. In particular, it sheds light on contemporary identity-shaping environments, such as social media, and suggests that any serious attempt to model human-like autonomy in artificial systems may require more than problem-solving and goal optimization alone: it may require a dynamically organized architecture of identity and motivational priority.
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Fabrizio De Palma
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Fabrizio De Palma (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d896046c1944d70ce07347 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19476473