Contemporary theories of human motivation have significantly expanded understanding of behavior beyond traditional hierarchical models of needs. Approaches grounded in self-determination, social identity, symbolic interactionism, predictive processing, affective forecasting, and digital social influence have each provided valuable insights into specific dimensions of motivational processes. However, these perspectives often focus on isolated mechanisms and offer limited explanation of how multiple sources of value are dynamically prioritized, reweighted, and reorganized when they come into tension within a single behavioral decision. This paper proposes the Symbolic–Functional Model of Motivation, a theoretical framework that conceptualizes behavior as the outcome of a continuous evaluative process operating between symbolic considerations—such as meaning, identity, belonging, legitimacy, and social recognition—and functional considerations related to utility, stability, persistence, and practical outcomes. Rather than assuming a fixed hierarchy of needs or stable motivational priorities, the model argues that the relative importance of symbolic and functional dimensions is dynamically reorganized in response to contextual conditions, accumulated experience, social pressures, and structural constraints. To formalize this perspective, the paper develops an initial axiomatic architecture that specifies the interaction between symbolic value, functional value, contextual constraints, and dynamically changing evaluative weights. The framework introduces formal definitions of evaluative dominance, dynamic sensitivity thresholds, behavioral oscillation, and motivational reorganization under contextual change. These concepts provide a mechanism for explaining behavioral stability, abrupt preference reversals, rapid social transitions, identity transformation, and collective behavioral diffusion. The paper further illustrates the explanatory potential of the model through applications to digital trends, symbolic consumption, group loyalty, and rapid social change. By integrating symbolic, functional, and contextual dimensions within a unified evaluative structure, the proposed framework offers a novel foundation for understanding motivational dynamics and provides a basis for future empirical investigation and formal model development. Keywords: Human Motivation; Symbolic–Functional Dynamics; Behavioral Reorganization; Evaluative Processes; Social Identity; Symbolic Value; Functional Utility; Social Change.
Najm Abe Housh (Sat,) studied this question.